Suppression of inflammatory arthritis by simultaneous inhibition of nitric oxide synthase and NADPH oxidase.
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TH1-type proinflammatory cytokines induce the expression of phagocytic nitric oxide synthase (NOS) and prime the membrane-bound NADPH oxidase of neutrophils and monocytes of mice so as to attain an activated state, which upon a second stimulus releases up to 6-fold increased levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS) than do unprimed phagocytes. Enhanced levels of ROS and NO deregulate inflammatory signal transduction pathways, which play a crucial role in the pathogenesis of arthritis. The antiarthritic reactivity of diphenylene iodoniumchloride (DPI), an irreversible inhibitor of NADPH oxidase and NOS, was tested in male DBA/1xB10A(4R) hybrid mice suffering from potassium peroxochromate-induced arthritis. Daily doses of 2.8 mu mol/kg of DPI sufficed to inhibit the arthritis by 50%. A complete inhibition was obtained with 10 mu mol/kg of DPI. The reduction of overt arthritic symptoms correlated well with both the reduced levels of ROS and NO in plasma of DPI-treated mice. Our data support the hypothesis that oxidative stress and nitric oxides play a pivotal role in the pathology of arthritis, which can be therapeutically targetted by NADPH oxidase- and NO synthase-inhibitors.