Elastase, a serine proteinase released by activated human neutrophils, can degrade a wide variety of biomacromols. including elastin, and is considered a marker of inflammatory diseases. As the logical strategy to protect tissue is to inhibit excessive elastase activity, exptl. and clin. researches have concd. on trying to find efficient elastase inhibitors. As thymol, one of the major components of thyme oil with a phenolic structure, has been credited with a series of pharmacol. properties, that include antimicrobial and antioxidant effects, the aim of this study was to explore whether it can also interfere with the release of elastase by human neutrophils stimulated with the synthetic chemotactic peptide N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (fMLP). After the neutrophils were incubated with increasing amts. of thymol (2.5, 5, 10, 20 mg/mL), elastase release was initiated by fMLP and measured using MeO-Suc-Ala-Ala-Pro-Val-MCA. The results showed that thymol inhibited fMLP-induced elastase release in a concn.-dependent manner, with the effects of 10 and 20 mg/mL being statistically significant. The behavior of cytosolic calcium mobilization revealed by fura-2 closely resembled that of elastase, thus suggesting that they may be related. The hydrophobic nature of thymol means that it can approach ion channel proteins through the lipid phase of the membrane, alter the local environment of calcium channels and thus inhibit capacitative calcium entry. In brief, thymol inactivates calcium channels machinery, thus triggering a corresponding redn. in elastase. The antibacterial and antimycotic activity of thymol is already well known, but our findings that it inhibits elastase extend our knowledge of the anti-inflammatory activity of this interesting mol. that is already credited with antioxidant activity. These two latter characteristics make thymol a mol. that can have helpful effects in controlling the inflammatory processes present in many infections. [on SciFinder (R)]
Anti-inflammatory activity of thymol : inhibitory effect on the release of human neutrophil elastase / P. Braga, M. Dal Sasso, M. Culici, T. Bianchi, L. Bordoni, L. Marabini. - In: PHARMACOLOGY. - ISSN 0031-7012. - 77:3(2006), pp. 130-136.
Anti-inflammatory activity of thymol : inhibitory effect on the release of human neutrophil elastase
P. BragaPrimo
;L. MarabiniUltimo
2006
Abstract
Elastase, a serine proteinase released by activated human neutrophils, can degrade a wide variety of biomacromols. including elastin, and is considered a marker of inflammatory diseases. As the logical strategy to protect tissue is to inhibit excessive elastase activity, exptl. and clin. researches have concd. on trying to find efficient elastase inhibitors. As thymol, one of the major components of thyme oil with a phenolic structure, has been credited with a series of pharmacol. properties, that include antimicrobial and antioxidant effects, the aim of this study was to explore whether it can also interfere with the release of elastase by human neutrophils stimulated with the synthetic chemotactic peptide N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (fMLP). After the neutrophils were incubated with increasing amts. of thymol (2.5, 5, 10, 20 mg/mL), elastase release was initiated by fMLP and measured using MeO-Suc-Ala-Ala-Pro-Val-MCA. The results showed that thymol inhibited fMLP-induced elastase release in a concn.-dependent manner, with the effects of 10 and 20 mg/mL being statistically significant. The behavior of cytosolic calcium mobilization revealed by fura-2 closely resembled that of elastase, thus suggesting that they may be related. The hydrophobic nature of thymol means that it can approach ion channel proteins through the lipid phase of the membrane, alter the local environment of calcium channels and thus inhibit capacitative calcium entry. In brief, thymol inactivates calcium channels machinery, thus triggering a corresponding redn. in elastase. The antibacterial and antimycotic activity of thymol is already well known, but our findings that it inhibits elastase extend our knowledge of the anti-inflammatory activity of this interesting mol. that is already credited with antioxidant activity. These two latter characteristics make thymol a mol. that can have helpful effects in controlling the inflammatory processes present in many infections. [on SciFinder (R)]Pubblicazioni consigliate
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