Inducible nitric oxide synthase mediates early epithelial repair of porcine ileum

JL Gookin, JM Rhoads… - American Journal of …, 2002 - journals.physiology.org
JL Gookin, JM Rhoads, RA Argenzio
American Journal of Physiology-Gastrointestinal and Liver …, 2002journals.physiology.org
Reports conflict regarding the effect of nitric oxide (NO) on intestinal epithelium. In chronic
injury, NO appears detrimental by combining with reactive oxygen to form potent-free
radicals. In contrast, inhibition of NO synthesis after acute injury exacerbates damage and
inflammation. Recent studies have disclosed constitutive expression of inducible NO
synthase (iNOS) by normal intestinal epithelia, yet little attention has been given to the role
of iNOS in acute epithelial repair. We studied the local effects of iNOS on early epithelial …
Reports conflict regarding the effect of nitric oxide (NO) on intestinal epithelium. In chronic injury, NO appears detrimental by combining with reactive oxygen to form potent-free radicals. In contrast, inhibition of NO synthesis after acute injury exacerbates damage and inflammation. Recent studies have disclosed constitutive expression of inducible NO synthase (iNOS) by normal intestinal epithelia, yet little attention has been given to the role of iNOS in acute epithelial repair. We studied the local effects of iNOS on early epithelial repair of porcine ileal mucosa injured by deoxycholate within Ussing chambers. iNOS was constitutively expressed by the villous epithelium, and after deoxycholate injury, iNOS was expressed by injured and detaching enterocytes. Selective inhibition of iNOS abolished increases in NO synthesis and villous reepithelialization after injury. Exogenous l-arginine rescued baseline reepithelialization from NOS inhibitors but was only capable of stimulating additional repair in the presence of serum. These results demonstrate that iNOS-derived NO is a key mediator of early villous reepithelialization following acute mucosal injury.
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