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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Mechanisms of action of antimalarials in inflammation: induction of apoptosis in human endothelial cells.

Antimalarials are beneficial therapeutic agents in systemic lupus and rheumatoid arthritis. These autoimmune diseases have abnormally low apoptosis of inflammatory cells. Both disorders have an abnormal angiogenesis. In the present report, antimalarials were demonstrated to selectively increase apoptosis of HUVECs in vitro. A 24-h exposure to 50 or 150 microM of the drugs was associated with a significant loss of substrate-adherent cells. Chloroquine exhibited an inhibitory effect on HUVEC proliferation over 7 days. Programmed cell death in HUVECs rendered nonadherent by chloroquine was confirmed by the induction of DNA fragmentation in floating cells. Northern blot analysis revealed a rapidly increased expression of the bcl-x(s) gene without any change in the expression of the bcl-2 gene, indicating that HUVECs under chloroquine were undergoing apoptosis. The onset of the apoptotic cascade in HUVECs appeared shortly after the addition of chloroquine. The effect of chloroquine on apoptosis was distinct from acute cell lysis and was restricted to HUVECs. Antimalarials also induced IL-1alpha production. In parallel, chloroquine alone did not increase the expression of IL-6. Anti-IL-1alpha Ab or IL-1Ra only marginally reversed chloroquine-induced depression of proliferation for the low drug concentration, but not the massive cell death effect at and above 50 microM. Taken together, these data may indicate that antimalarials repress angiogenesis. The autocrine mechanism involving IL-1alpha accounts only for a minor fraction of the full antiendothelial effect of chloroquine, which is mainly dependent on apoptosis.[1]

References

  1. Mechanisms of action of antimalarials in inflammation: induction of apoptosis in human endothelial cells. Potvin, F., Petitclerc, E., Marceau, F., Poubelle, P.E. J. Immunol. (1997) [Pubmed]
 
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