Robust Vascular Protective Effect of Hydroxamic Acid Derivatives in a Sickle Mouse Model of Inflammation

Objective: Clinically, the vascular pathobiology of human sickle cell disease includes an abnormal state of chronic inflammation and activation of the coagulation system. Since these biologies likely underlie development of vascular disease in sickle subjects, they offer attractive targets for novel...

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Published inMicrocirculation (New York, N.Y. 1994) Vol. 13; no. 6; pp. 489 - 497
Main Authors Kaul, Dhananjay K., Kollander, Rahn, Mahaseth, Hemchandra, Liu, Xiao-Du, Solovey, Anna, Belcher, John, Kelm, Robert J., Vercellotti, Gregory M., Hebbel, Robert P.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford, UK Informa UK Ltd 01.09.2006
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
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Summary:Objective: Clinically, the vascular pathobiology of human sickle cell disease includes an abnormal state of chronic inflammation and activation of the coagulation system. Since these biologies likely underlie development of vascular disease in sickle subjects, they offer attractive targets for novel therapeutics. Similar findings characterize the sickle transgenic mouse, which therefore provides a clinically relevant inflammation model. Method: The authors tested two polyhydroxyphenyl hydroxamic acid derivatives, didox and trimidox, in sickle transgenic mice. Animals were examined by intravital microscopy (cremaster muscle and dorsal skin fold preparations) and by histochemistry before and after transient exposure to hypoxia, with versus without preadministration of study drug. Previous studies have validated the application of hypoxia/reoxygenation to sickle transgenic mice as a disease-relevant model. Results: Animals pretreated with these agents exhibited marked improvements in leukocyte/ endothelial interaction, hemodynamics and vascular stasis, and endothelial tissue factor expression. Thus, these drugs unexpectedly exert powerful inhibition on both the inflammation and coagulation systems. Conclusions: Each of these changes is expected to be therapeutically beneficial in systemic inflammatory disease in general, and in sickle disease in particular. Thus, these novel compounds offer the advantage of having multiple therapeutic benefits in a single agent.
Bibliography:ark:/67375/WNG-Z5G8K1H6-R
ArticleID:MICC537
istex:74EF3999D29885269DC523529AD8323BDC829BED
This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health (HL55552 to RPH and DKK). We thank Stephana Choong and Fuad Abdualla for maintaining the mouse colony, and we thank Howard L. Elford (Molecules for Health, Richmond, VA) for providing the study drugs, didox and trimidox.
ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
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ISSN:1073-9688
1549-8719
DOI:10.1080/10739680600778456