Abstract

This review article describes the mechanism of enhancement of vascular permeability in infectious disease and cancer. This phenomenon is primarily mediated by bradykinin, nitric oxide and other unique vascular mediators. They are highly intermingled with each other in these disease states. Furthermore, these mediators are elicited in various in vivo settings most frequently induced by bacterial proteases, and indirect or direct activation of kallikrein-kinin cascade at one or more steps. The key steps involve bacterial proteases or cellular components including lipopolysaccharides. Thus, the use of appropriate protease inhibitors or antagonists, or scavengers in the case of nitric oxide, superoxide or peroxynitrite, are anticipated to attenuate the clinical manifestation induced by such mediators. It also explained that fluid accumulation in ascitic or pleural compartments in the case of carcinomatosis in terminal cancer patients can be largely attributed to bradykinin or related mechanism. Systemic bacterial dissemination is also facilitated by bradykinin, or suppressed by kinin antagonists as well as by the inhibition of kinin production, respectively. Thus, control of the level of such vascular mediators appears important both in infectious disease and in cancer. alpha1-Protease inhibitor, which inhibits neutrophil elastase, is inactivated by oxidative metabolites such as superoxide and peroxynitrite, and this effect activates matrix metalloproteinases. This indicates that oxidative stress activates proteolytic potential, and thus accelerates the degenerative process upon infection.

Keywords

PeroxynitriteBradykininProteasesKininNitric oxideChemistryKallikreinMatrix metalloproteinaseSuperoxideProteaseImmunologyPharmacologyBiochemistryMedicineEnzymeReceptor

MeSH Terms

AnimalsBacterial InfectionsCapillary PermeabilityCollagenasesEnzyme PrecursorsHumansKallikrein-Kinin SystemMetalloendopeptidasesNeoplasmsNitratesNitric Oxidealpha 1-Antitrypsin

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Publication Info

Year
1999
Type
review
Volume
43
Issue
2-3
Pages
115-128
Citations
83
Access
Closed

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83
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Cite This

Hiroshi Maeda, Jun Wu, Tatsuya Okamoto et al. (1999). Kallikrein–kinin in infection and cancer. Immunopharmacology , 43 (2-3) , 115-128. https://doi.org/10.1016/s0162-3109(99)00104-6

Identifiers

DOI
10.1016/s0162-3109(99)00104-6
PMID
10596842

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%