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Archives of Pharmacal Research | 1998

Protective effect of taurine on TNBS-induced inflammatory bowel disease in rats

Mi Won Son; Jun Il Ko; Hyoun Mie Doh; Won Bae Kim; Tae Sun Park; Mi Ja Shim; Byong Kak Kim

We had previously reported that the protective effect of taurine against indomethacin-induced gastric mucosal injury was due to its antioxidant effects, which inhibited lipid peroxidation and neutrophil activation. In this study, we examined the effect of taurine on reducing the inflammatory parameters of trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid (TNBS)-induced inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), in rats. In order to induce IBD, ethanolic TNBS was given to rats intracolonically. Then they received 500 mg/kg/day of taurine orally and were sacrificed one week after IBD induction. While ulceration and inflammation of distal colon with formation of granuloma in the vehicle-treated IBD rats two days after administration of TNBS were observed, treatment with taurine ameliorated colonic damage and decreased the incidence of diarrhea and adhesion. Also, colon weight as an index of tissue edema, which was markedly increased in the IBD rats, became significantly lower after taurine treatment. Myeloperoxidase (MPO) activity in the vehicle-treated IBD rats was substantially increased, compared with that of normal control. The taurine-treated animals significantly reduced MPO activity (35% lower) when compared with that of the vehicle-treated animals. Taurine treatment decreased both basal and formyl-methionyl leucyl phenylalanine-stimulated reactive oxygen generation from colonic tissue in the IBD rats. These results suggest that the administration of taurine reduce the inflammatory parameters in this IBD rat model by increasing defending capacity against oxidative damage.


Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology | 1996

Protective effect of taurine on indomethacin-induced gastric mucosal injury.

Miwon Son; Hee Kee Kim; Won Bae Kim; Junnick Yang; Byong Kak Kim

It has been suggested that oxygen-derived free radicals play an important role in the pathophysiology of acute gastric ulceration induced by NSAIDs and ischemia-reperfusion. Taurine is hypothesized to exert its protective effect on NSAIDs-induced gastric injury by its antioxidant properties. The protective effect of taurine on indomethacin-induced gastric mucosal lesion and its protective mechanism were investigated. Intragastric administration of 25 mg/kg of indomethacin induced hemorrhagic lesions on the glandular stomach in rats. Pretreatment with 0.25 or 0.5 g/kg of taurine one day before or for 3 days significantly reduced gastric lesion formation and inhibited the elevation of lipid peroxide level in gastric mucosa. Both resting and FMLP-induced luminol-dependent chemiluminescence of rat peritoneal neutrophils increased immediately after treatment with indomethacin. Taurine (5-20 mM) inhibited chemiluminescence of neutrophils activated by FMLP. Human neutrophils (polymorphonuclear leukocytes) adhered to the confluent monolayer of human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) after coincubation with indomethacin. This neutrophil adhesion induced by indomethacin to HUVEC was prevented by taurine in a dose-dependent manner. These results indicate that the protective effect of taurine against NSAIDs-induced gastric mucosal injury is due to its antioxidant effect, which inhibits lipid peroxidation and neutrophil activation.


Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology | 1998

Taurine Can Ameliorate Inflammatory Bowel Disease in Rats

Miwon Son; Jun Il Ko; Won Bae Kim; Hee Kyoung Kang; Byong Kak Kim

We previously reported that the protective effect of taurine against indomethacin-induced gastric mucosal injury was due to its antioxidant effects which inhibited lipid peroxidation and neutrophil activation. In this study, we examined the effect of taurine on reducing the inflammatory parameters of trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid (TNBS)-induced inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) in rats. To induce IBD, rats were given ethanolic TNBS intracolonically. The rats then received 500 mg/kg/day of taurine per orally. The rats were sacrificed one week after IBD induction. Ulceration and inflammation of the distal colon with formation of granuloma in the vehicle-treated IBD rats after two days of administration of TNBS were observed. Treatment with 0.5 g/kg of taurine by the oral route ameliorated colonic damage and decreased the incidence of diarrhea and adhesions. Colon weight (an index of tissue edema) was markedly increased in the IBD rats after administration of TNBS, but was significantly lower after taurine treatment. Myeloperoxidase (MPO) activity in the vehicle-treated IBD rats was substantially increased compared with that of the control. The taurine-treated animals showed reduced MPO activity (35% lower) when compared with that of the vehicle-treated animals. Taurine treatment decreased basal and formyl-methionyl leucyl phenylalanine (FMLP) stimulated reactive oxygen generation in colonic tissue of the IBD rat compared with vehicle treatment after one week. These results suggest that administration of taurine reduced the inflammatory parameters in this rat model of IBD by increasing the defenses against oxidative insult.


Life Sciences | 1999

CLONING AND CYTOTOXICITY OF FUSION PROTEINS OF EGF AND ANGIOGENIN

Jong Myung Yoon; Seung Hee Han; Oh Byung Kown; Seung Ho Kim; Myung Hwan Park; Byong Kak Kim

Targeted toxins represent a new approach to specific cytocidal therapy. Immunotoxins based on plant and microbial toxins are very immunogenic. To develop a targeted therapy that is less immunogenic and easily invades target tissues, four fusion proteins containing human angiogenin targeted by human EGF have been constructed. EGF is a single chain polypeptide, which binds to epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and is known to be internalized by endocytosis. Angiogenin has been separately fused either at the amino terminus or the carboxyl terminus of EGF via linkers, giving rise to angiogenin-gly-EGF, angiogenin-(gly)4ser-EGF and EGF-angiogenin, EGF-gly-angiogenin, respectively. The fusion proteins were over-expressed in Escherichia coli and purified from periplasmic eluents by affinity chromatography. EGF-angiogenin and EGF-gly-angiogenin maintained receptor-binding activity of EGF and RNase activity of angiogenin in a single peptide and actively inhibited growth of human EGFR-positive target cells in culture. They are expected to have a very low immunogenic potential in humans because of their endogenous origin and also to have another potential therapeutic advantage because these fusion proteins may have overcome conventional immunotoxin and possess increased ability to penetrate because of their small size.


Archives of Pharmacal Research | 1997

Inhibition of cytopathic effect of human immunodeficiency virus-1 by water-soluble extract ofGanoderma lucidum.

Ha Won Kim; Mi Ja Shim; Eung Chil Choi; Byong Kak Kim

To examine components ofGanoderma lucidum for anti-human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) activity, the aqueous extracts of its basidiocarps were separated into high-molecular-weight (HMF) and low-molecular-weight (LMF) fractions. These fractions were used in XTT [2,3-bis (2-methoxy-4-nitro-5-sulfophenyl)-5-[(phenylamino) carbonyl]-2H-tetrazolium hydroxide] antiviral assay which can quantitatively measure cytopathic effects of HIV-1 on CEM, human T lymphoblastoid cell line. The CEM cell line added with serial diluted HMF or LMF was cultured in the absence or presence of HIV-1. The results showed that the LMF of the aqueous extract strongly inhibited cytopathic effect of the target cell induced by HIV-1. When two-fold serially diluted LMF ranging from 0.97 μg/ml to 125.00 μg/ml was added to the virus-free culture system, no toxicity on the target cells was detected in all the concentrations tested. However, when it was added to the HIV-infected culture system, the viabilities of the target cell reached a plateau recovering its viabilities to 71.7% and 82.5% in experiment-1 and-2 at 15.60 μg/ml, respectively. The cell viabilities were then gradually decreased but maintained at more than 50% above 31.20 μg/ml concentration. On the contrary, HMF did not prevent any HIV-induced cytopathic effect at any concentrations tested on this cell line. From these results, negligible toxicities were observed by both HMF and LMF ofG. lucidum, and recovery of cell viability in HIV infected target cell was induced only by LMF of the carpophores.


Archives of Pharmacal Research | 1979

Studies on the constituents of higher fungi of Korea(XXIII)

Byong Kak Kim; Eun Kyue Park; Mi Ja Shim

The carpophores of three Korean mushrooms,Coriolus versicolor, Pleurotus ostreatus andLentinus edodes were respectively extracted with hot water and the extracts were dialyzed through Visking tube. They were found to exert an antitumor activity against sarcoma-180 implanted in mice. Especially, the inhibition ratio of the extract ofCoriolus versicolor (100 mg/Kg, i.p.) was almost 100%. But all the extracts did not affect the growth of leukemia L5187Y cellsin vitro. Therefore these facts indicate that the extracts appear to stimulate cell-mediated immunity.


Life Sciences | 2003

myo-Inositol restores the inflammation-induced down-regulation of taurine transport by the murine macrophage cell line, RAW 264.7

Ha Won Kim; Jung Hyun Kim; Hye Suk An; Kun Koo Park; Byong Kak Kim; Taesun Park

The role of myo-inositol in the regulation of taurine transport in activated murine macrophage cell line, RAW 264.7, was studied. Challenge of RAW 264.7 murine macrophages for 24 hr with phorbol ester 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) (10 ng/ml), a PKC activator, resulted in a 62% decrease in taurine transport activity. Among the various monosaccharides (1 mM) tested in the presence of PMA, myo-inositol was most effective in restoring the PMA-induced down-regulation of taurine transport in murine macrophages (82% increase compared to the value for cells treated with PMA Alone, p < 0.01). The protective role of myo-inositol against stress-induced down-regulation of taurine transport by macrophages was further investigated in conditions mimicking bacterial infection, inflammation, and immune-suppressed circumstances. A challenge of murine macrophages with lipopolysaccharide (LPS) (0.1 and 10 microg/ml) resulted in a 60% decrease in taurine transport activity compared to the value for untreated control cells (p < 0.01). When cells were co-treated with myo-inositol (100 nM approximately 10 mM) in the presence of LPS for 24 hrs, taurine transport activity increased in a dose-dependent manner compared to the value for cells treated with LPS only. Taurine transport activity in cells treated with LPS (10 microg/ml) plus interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) (150 unit/ml) for 24 hrs was 13% of the value for untreated control cells (p < 0.01). Again, this inflammation-induced down-regulation of taurine transport activity was completely antagonized with co-administration of 100 nM or higher levels of myo-inositol in the culture medium. Similarly, myo-inositol effectively restored the taurine transport activity suppressed by cyclosporin A (0.5 and 50 nM) in murine macrophages (p < 0.01). From these results, myo-inositol appears to be a common accelerator of taurine transport by murine macrophages in diverse conditions of down-regulated taurine transport.


Archives of Pharmacal Research | 1991

Studies on intergeneric protoplast fusion and nuclear transfer betweenGanoderma lucidum andCoriolus versicolor

Seol Hee Park; Eung Chil Choi; Byong Kak Kim

Stable intergeneric hybrids involving allodiploid were obtained through protoplast fusion and nuclear transfer between the auxotrophic mutants of two basidiomycetes,Ganoderma lucidum andCoriolus versicolor.


International Journal of Immunopharmacology | 1996

Induction of B cell proliferation and NF-κB activation by a water soluble glycan from Lentinus lepideus

Mirim Jin; Sunyoung Kim; Byong Kak Kim

Many immune modulating compounds have been isolated from fungal extracts, but the molecular mechanisms of their action have rarely been elucidated. In this study we isolated a proteoglycan from cultured mycelia of Lentinus lepideus and tested its effects on murine spleen cells. The acidic-polysaccharide fraction was obtained by extraction with hot water followed by purification using DEAE-cellulose anion exchange. The molecular mass of the compound was determined by Sepharose CL-4B gel filtration to be approximately 47 kDa. When cultured in the presence of the compound, spleen cells from C3H mice underwent rapid cell proliferation and cell aggregation. Treatment with the compound also caused a 10-fold increase in [3H]-thymidine incorporation compared to a control, confirming cell proliferation. Flow cytometry analysis indicated that the affected cell population was mainly B cells. As one approach to understanding the molecular mechanism of this action, we investigated the effects of the compound on cellular transcription factors which are known to control the proliferation of immune cells. Using gel retardation assays, we found that the compound significantly activated NF-kappa B but not AP-1 in spleen cells. Taken together, the data suggest that the proteoglycan compound is a biological response modifier that stimulates B cell proliferation, probably by regulating cellular transcription factors such as NF-kappa B.


Archives of Pharmacal Research | 1982

An antitumor component ofLaetiporus sulphureus and its immunostimulating activity

Chang-Yuil Kang; Chong Ock Lee; Kyeong Soo Chung; Eung Chil Choi; Byong Kak Kim

A protein-polysaccharide fraction was prepared from the carpophores ofLaetiporus sulphureus. This fraction suppressed growth of sarcoma 180 in A-strain mice when administeredi.p. To investigate the mechanism of antitumor action of this fraction, plaque assay was conducted by administratingi.p. to the mice at a dose level of 50mg/kg for five days. Ten days later, the mice were immunized with 1×107 sheep red blood cells, The number of hemolytic plaque forming cells was significantly greater than that of the control mice. Three monosaccharides and fifteen amino acids were identified in the protein-polysaccharide fraction.

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Eung Chil Choi

Seoul National University

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Ha Won Kim

Seoul National University

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Mi Ja Shim

Seoul National University

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Jong Myung Yoon

Seoul National University

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Chaekyun Kim

Seoul National University

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Eun Jin Lee

Seoul National University

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Eun Kyue Park

Seoul National University

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Eung-Chil Choi

Seoul National University

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