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Bioscience, Biotechnology and Biochemistry 2006-Dec

Reduced lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced nitric oxide production in peritoneal macrophages and inhibited LPS-induced lethal shock in mice by a sugar cane (Saccharum officinarum L.) extract.

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Kenji Hikosaka
Yukari Koyama
Maki Motobu
Manabu Yamada
Kikuyasu Nakamura
Kenji Koge
Kameo Shimura
Takashi Isobe
Naotoshi Tsuji
Chung-Boo Kang

Keywords

Abstract

A sugar cane extract (SCE) has been found to have an immunostimulating effect in several animals. Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) is known to induce endotoxin shock via the production of inflammatory modulators such as tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha and nitric oxide (NO). We examined in the present study the effects of SCE on the TNF-alpha and NO production in LPS-stimulated mice peritoneal cells and the endotoxin shock in mice. The supplementation of SCE to peritoneal macrophages cultured with LPS resulted in a significant decrease in NO production. All the mice injected intraperitoneally with LPS and D-galactosamine (LPS+GalN) died within 24 h. However, a peritoneal injection, but no intravenous or oral administration, of SCE (500-1,000 mg/kg) at 3 to 48 h before the LPS+GalN-challenge resulted in a significantly improved survival rate. These results suggest that SCE had a protective effect on LPS-induced endotoxin shock via one of possible mechanisms involving the suppression of NO production in the mouse peritoneal cavity.

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