Guest guest Posted March 10, 2005 Report Share Posted March 10, 2005 Anti-inflammatory fish-oil EPA product resolvin is blocked by COX-2 inhibitors Rheumawire Mar 7, 2005 Janis Boston, MA - The anti-inflammatory effect of fish oils appears to be due to a powerful anti-inflammatory compound called resolvin (resolution-phase interaction product) E1, which is produced from eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA), Dr Makoto Arita (Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA) and colleagues report in the March 7, 2005 issue of the Journal of Experimental Medicine [1]. Arita writes, " At nanomolar levels, resolvin E1 dramatically reduced dermal inflammation, peritonitis, dendritic cell migration, and interleukin (IL)-12 production. " Senior author Dr N Serhan (Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School) tells rheumawire that the resolvin E1 pathway might also explain some of the untoward cardiovascular effects of the COX-2 inhibitors. " In vitro, we found that inhibiting vascular endothelial cells' COX-2 blocks the biosynthesis of resolvin E1. In humans, in vivo evidence is needed, and this would require a clinical trial. Maybe our findings can serve as the base for such future clinical studies, " says Serhan. Aspirin increases, coxibs decrease resolvin E1 biosynthesis In contrast to the coxib effect, Serhan's group had previously found that aspirin triggers the conversion of EPA to various resolvins and had identified resolvin E1 in the plasma of human subjects given omega-3 fatty acids and aspirin. Resolvin E1 was discovered in vivo during the resolution phase of inflammation in exudates from inflamed tissues in a mouse model. The main task of resolvin E1 appears to be to serve as a counterregulator to proinflammatory mediators and turn down acute inflammatory processes before too much damage is done to normal tissue. " The resolution of inflammation is an active process controlled in part by endogenous chemical mediators that counterregulate proinflammatory gene expression and cell trafficking as well as stimulate inflammatory cell clearance, " the authors write. The current study showed that as little as 100 ng/mouse of synthetic resolvin E1 could decrease leukocyte infiltration into inflammatory loci by 50% to 60% in a mouse model of tumor-necrosis-factor (TNF)--induced inflammation. By comparison, local administration of dexamethasone produced 60% inhibition in this model, aspirin produced 70% inhibition, and indomethacin gave 25% inhibition. Resolvin counteracts the effect of TNF- The investigators found that the resolvin E1 anti-inflammatory effect is mediated via the ChemR23 receptor, activation of which inhibits NF-B activation. Resolvin E1 thus acts as a selective agonist that counterregulates TNF-. The ChemR23 receptor was mapped in cardiovascular, brain, kidney, gastrointestinal, and myeloid tissues. " It is possible that loss of resolvin pathways like the one we documented here could give rise to ongoing chronic inflammatory phenotypesas being unable to actively turn off acute responses, rather then [as suggested by] the current thinking that chronic inflammatory diseases arise by enhanced inflammation, " Serhan says. He adds that resolvin E1 and its receptor present possible targets for therapeutic intervention. The researchers conclude, " Together, our findings offer an endogenous agonist-driven molecular mechanism that can underlie some of the beneficial actions of omega-3 EPA observed in many clinical situations, as well as identify novel components in endogenous anti-inflammation/resolution, namely resolvin E1 and its receptor, that are of interest as new checkpoint regulators that may be involved in the pathogenesis of a wide range of human diseases. " Source Arita M, Bianchini F, Aliberti J, et al. Stereochemical assignment, anti-inflammatory properties, and receptor for the omega-3 lipid mediator resolving E1. J Exp Med 2005; 201: DOI:10.1084/jem.20042031. Available at: http://www.jem.org. Not an MD I'll tell you where to go! Mayo Clinic in Rochester http://www.mayoclinic.org/rochester s Hopkins Medicine http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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