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Download III: Cells Utilizing Oxygen to Form Lipid Regulators and
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1 Platelets use Oxygen to form Lipid Regulators while Endothelial cells form NO A) Platelet function: i. Blood clotting and stroke (anticoagulant drugs) ii. Prostaglandin and thromboxane formation from polyunsaturated fatty acids iii. Nutritional approach to prevent heart disease iv. COX Inhibitors (NSAIDs) (antiplatelet drugs) B) Endothelial cell functions: Prostacyclin and plasminogen activator formation Role of endothelial cells in regulating blood pressure: - Angiotensin and EDRF Nitric oxide formation, signaling and toxicity: - Use of Nitric Oxide generators: (vasodilator / antihypertensive drugs) 2 Platelets t1/2 = 4 days Fragments of Megakaryocytes of bone marrow Contain: glycogen granules Mitochondria Lysosomes No nucleus, DNA, protein synthesis. 1) dense granules – ADP, ATP, serotonin (5HT) 2) a granules contain clotting factors and PDGF (platelet derived growth factor) 80% ATP from glycolysis and 20% from mitochondria 3 Platelet Function is to plug blood leaks (blood clotting) Activated by collagen (damaged vascular surface) or thrombin which binds to receptors. Platelet disc shape changes to sphere i.e. swell, form pseudopods, become sticky and attach to collagen Resting platelets Activated Platelets Images From: http://www-personal.engin.umich.edu/~tkinzer/ 4 Mechanism of platelet aggregation to form a clot Phospholipid ADP released from platelet granule receptor Ca2+ influx in other platelets Membrane Phospholipase A2 activated Aspirin Arachidonate (drug) acetylates cyclooxygenase 2O2 Diacylglycerol (DAG) + inositol triphosphate (IP3) PLATELET AGGREGATION PGH2 TxA2 synthetase drug? Phosphatidylinositol Membrane Phospholipase C Granule release Thromboxane A2 (TxA2) receptor collagen receptor COLLAGEN Contraction of microtubules Ca2+ Influx Fibrin clot formed by zymogen activation cascade INTRINSIC PATHWAY Modified from Fig. 10.37, Stryer (5th ed). A fibrin clot (blood clot) is formed by the interplay of the intrinsic, extrinsic, and final common pathways. Intrinsic pathway: • initiated when factor XII is activated by contact with abnormal surfaces due to injury. Extrinsic pathway: • triggered by trauma, which activates factor VII which releases tissue factor. Traps aggregated platelets 5 Anticoagulant drugs (stroke treatment prevents new clots) 6 . • Vitamin K is essential for prothrombin synthesis (and other clotting factors). • Abnormal prothrombin is formed (does not bind Ca2+) in the absence of Vit. K or in the presence of Vit. K antagonists (see below). Anticoagulants Drugs – Vit. K antagonists Vitamin K O O CH3 O OH H C H H O CH3 6 OH O Dicoumarol - Spoiled sweet clover causes fatal hemorrhagic disease in cattle. O O Warfarin for thrombosis but high CYP2C9 polymorphism. Drug name Coumadin (rat poison) 2-3 days before it works DONT admin. again for 3d O H C OH O CH3 7 Drug induced thrombocytopenia • Life threatening platelet depletion caused by drug or heparin induced antibodies which bind to platelet factor 4 complex. This is not associated with immune memory. • Hemorrhage, bruising, brain, nose bleeds, stools • Drugs heparin, quinine, antimicrobials, NSAIDs, penicillin, ranitidine, furosemide Platelets Repair Broken Blood Vessel a. Platelets secrete platelet derived growth factor (PDGF): a growth factor migration and division of vascular endothelial cells, smooth muscle cells, fibroblasts REPAIR OF DAMAGED VASCULAR WALLS b. MEMBRANE ACTIN AND MYOSIN CONTRACT platelet attached to fibrin are retracted CLOT RETRACTS edges of broken blood vessel are pulled together c. Platelets collected and stored for use in surgeries , transplants and cancer therapy to stop bleeding. 8 9 Prostaglandin and thromboxane synthesis stages 1. Membrane Phospholipid Containing a Glycerol Backbone and a Fatty Acid at the First Position, b Arachidonic Acid at the Second Position c Polar Phospholipid Moiety at the Third Position. 10 Biochemical Structure of Typical Fatty Acids Incorporated Into Membrane Phospholipids PGE1 PGE2 PGE3 Overview of Cyclooxygenase (COX) Pathways 11 12 Conversion of Arachidonic Acid to PGD2, PGF2a, PGE2 2O2 O COOH COOH Cyclooxygenase CYCLOOXYGENASE Arachidonate O PGG2 * _ Aspirin Indomethacin Ibuprofen Drugs, Carcinogens Peroxidase PEROXIDASE * O Isomerase ISOMERASE COOH O PGH2 O COOH OH PGE2 Oxidised (Toxic) Toxin prev. by NSAIDs e.g. Colon cancer NSAIDs Prostaglandin synthase consists of cyclooxygenase (COX) and peroxidase OH OOH OH Isomerase ISOMERASE OH COOH Reductase REDUCTASE OH O COOH OH OH PGF2a OH PGD2 * NSAID now used as prophylaxis to prevent colon carcinogenesis 13 Prostaglandin and Prostacyclin and Heart Disease OMEGA-3 H3C Unstaurated Fatty Acid Formation CH3 Essential Fatty Acids From the diet OMEGA-6 H3C CH3 Linoleic Acid (LA) 18:2 a-Linolenic acid (LNA)18:3 Delta-6Desaturase Stearidonic Acid (SDA) -Linolenic Acid (GLA) Elongase Eicosatetraenoic acid Dihomogamma Linolenic acid (DGLA) Delta-5Desaturase Eicosapentaenoic Acid (EPA) Series 3 Prostaglandins Arachidonic Acid Series 1 Prostaglandins 14 Series 2 Prostaglandins 15 Antiplatelet drugs Cyclooxygenase (COX) and COX inhibitors (NSAIDs) COX-1 (ALL CELLS) COX-2 (INFLAMMATORY CELLS) Physiological Function – all cells - PG’s cytoprotective (stomach, kidney) - TXA platelet (clotting function) Inflammatory cells (also brain) - mediate inflammation and pain - inducible by cytokines, mitogens, endotoxins (contributes to rheumatoid arthritis) - promote colon cancer by preventing apoptosis - causes premature labour Inhibitors - aspirin, NSAIDS, antithrombosis drugs but cause gastric/renal lesions Inhibitors - selective NSAIDS e.g. nimesulide - chemoprevention/colon cancer - antipyretic (knockout mice – infertile females, no intestinal polyps) Colon cancer prevented by low daily doses of aspirin or COX inhib. 16 • Aspirin inhibits COXI which catalyse the peroxidase activation of environmental arylamines to human carcinogens e.g. benzidine,naphthylamine. Azoxymethane rodent colon carcinogen. • COX2 activity & extracellular matrix metalloproteinases is induced by inflammation or colorectal cancer (CRC). • Inhibitors of these enzymes decrease CRC metastasis Diseases Colon Rectum 51,342-347(2008) NSAIDS COX-1 inhibitors bind COX enzyme (prevents PGE formation) GI toxicity as PGE protects intestinal mucosa 1) Aspirin - irreversible - acetylates Ser 530, prevents arachidonic acid binding 2) Mefenamate, Ibuprofen - reversible, competitive with fatty acid binding . 3) Flurbiprofen - slow binding (salt bridge) competitive inhibition by binding in the hydrophobic channel 4) Indomethacin - non-selective - binds deepest in hydrophobic channel (incr. risk of hypertension, congestive heart failure unlike Celecoxib) COX-2 inhibitors on the market – much less GI toxicity 4) Celecoxib (celebrex). Vioxx withdrawn 17 18 Role of endothelial cells in regulating blood pressure and Nitric oxide formation, signaling and toxicity Function of Endothelial cells (line vessel walls) 19 1) Angiotensin converting enzyme (inhibited by specific dipeptides) used to lower blood pressure. Captopril*25-50mg (but agranulocytosis risk, cough), Enalapril*1-20 mg. Ramipril 2.5-20 mg (10mg also for preventing cardiovascular/stroke in diabetics. Angiotensin converting enzyme formation and action Angiotensinogen (411 aa) synthesised in the liver Plasma renin (synthesised in kidney, a protease) ACE inhibitors Angiotensin II in plasma (8 aa) angiotensin converting enzyme (endothelial cells) (therefore a dipeptidase) Angiotensin I in plasma (10aa) 2aa Vasoconstrictor blood pressure 20 Endothelial cells (line vessel walls) Cell surface extracellular activity – (cont.) 2) ATPase and 5’-nucleotidase degrade ATP and ADP 3) Inactivate prostaglandins E and F and leukotrienes C4 and D4 Intracellular endothelial cell activity 4) Monoamine oxidase plasma norepinephrine or serotonin 5) Thromboplastin synthesis and secretion (activated state) initiate blood clotting (extrinsic pathway) 6) Synthesis and secrete plasminogen activators (resting state) initiates clot fibrinolysis 21 Synthesis and Secretion of Plasminogen Activators (Resting State) initiate Clot Formation (reversed by clot busters” e.g.plasmin & plasminogen activator) Stroke Therapy (Dissolve clots) Fibrin Plasminogen incorporated into clot fibrin Plasmin (a serine protease) Plasminogen Activator* (a serine protease) Endothelial cell CO CO? Dissolve fibrin Therefore activator Fibrin-bound plasmin Fibrinolysis Stroke therapy (con’t) Drug companies are using recombinant DNA technology to make PLASMINOGEN ACTIVATORS to reduce myocardial damage following acute coronary thrombosis (but x 10 expensive and no better/safer. Cigarette smoke CO damages endothelial cell Prevent clotting e.g., stored blood 1. Complex Ca2+ with citrate or oxalate 2. Heparin* helps remove thrombin (produced by mast cells) 22 23 Endothelial cells (con’t) Plasma Membrane Activity 7) PROSTACYCLIN* synthesis and release (resting state) (PGI2) prevents platelet aggregation arachidonic phospholipid PGG2 PGI2 acid phospholipase A2 prostaglandin synthetase (cyclooxygenase) PGI2 synthetase Therefore endothelial cells function to prevent thrombosis Prostacyclin synthase inhib. by COX2 inhibitor e.g. rofecoxib. 8) EDRF (i.e. nitric oxide, a vasodilator) formed from arginine EDRF - Endothelial Derived Relaxing Factor (NO). Endothelial cell regulation of blood pressure i.e. effect on smooth muscle cells i.e. acetylcholine relaxes vascular smooth muscle only if endothelial cells are present. ENDOTHELIAL derived RELAXING FACTOR: - unstable and inactivated by oxygen and hemoglobin Local hormone - indentified as nitric oxide! 24 25 Nitric Oxide Synthases (NOS) O H2N CH CH CH C O H2 N OH CH C O OH H2N C H2 2 2 1 NADP + N A D PH N A D PH 1 NADP + C H2 CH C OH CH 2 / CH / 2 + CH 2 NOS O2 NH C NH L C H2 H 2O 2 NOS O2 NH NH C A " N H2 - N CH N H 2O NH OH n P C NH A NO 2 2 O a 4 -L Arginine (100 uM in blood, 2 mM in endothelial cells) - NO synthesized from citrulline Science 278, 425-431 (1997). 26 4) Drugs that act by Generating Nitric Oxide 27 (NO.) 1) NITROGLYCERIN - antianginal, antihypertensive, vasodilator NO CH2 O NO 2 L r e NO i C H2 OH A C HO NO 2 i C H2 ON O2 N v CHO N O2 2 CH2 O NO 2 v CH 2O NO 2 D a CH 2O H G CH 2O NO 2 g G V c t G a e SG r G S u HS s l a S NO Adverse effect: oxidative stress , HEADACHE unless tolerant Tolerance because vascular ALDH in mitochondria reduces NG but is inactivated.by peroxynitrite formed when NO reacts with O2 (formed when NO inhibits respiratory chain) (J.Clin.Invest.113,482-9(2004);J.Am.Coll.Cardiol.57,93-8(2011). Tolerance reversed antioxidants atorvastatin,carvediol,thiols,hydralazine,,HMG-CoA red.inhib. 28 “AMYL” NITRITE (i.e. isopentyl nitrite) - potent vasodilators which are inhaled (Roberts) H3C CH CH H2O H 2C H 3C m NO O H 3C o CH C H2C H 2 H C 3 A G -ON O N mr r it a N O G S G s + GSH transferase (GST 4-4) y 29 Amyl nitrite (con’t) A) Prescription drug (except 1960-1969) In glass ampules enclosed in mesh - crushed in the fingers = popping sound. “Poppers” - inhaled to relieve angina. B) Recreational inhalant (“locker room”) - Butyl nitrite aphrodisiac – used for enhancing sexual pleasure as nitrite induces vasodilation of the rectal mucosal muscles. but causes acute hemolysis if G6PDH deficient J.of Toxicol-Clin Toxicol.42,313-6(2004);J. Neuroimmunol.83, 157-61 (98) C) Cyanide antidote - nitrite oxidises oxyhemoglobin to methemoglobin (Poison control centre) and then Fe3+ of methemoglobin complexes cyanide.