Reactive oxygen-derived free radical species have been implicated in the pathogenesis and pathophysiology of inflammatory lung diseases. In a guinea pig model of aerosolized endotoxin-induced bronchial hyperresponsiveness to substance P, a possible involvement of oxidative lung injury was assessed by measuring the changes in membrane-bound neutral endopeptidase activity in the airway tissues and the level of lipid peroxides in the plasma. Vehicle-treated animals developed a neutrophilic airway inflammation, bronchial hyperresponsiveness to substance P associated with neutral endopeptidase hypoactivity, and elevation of lipid peroxides at 18 to 24 h after an exposure to endotoxin (75 microgram/ml, 40 min). A nonselective phosphodiesterase inhibitor, aminophylline, and selective phosphodiesterase isoenzyme inhibitors, SDZ-ISQ-844 (type III/IV) and SDZ-MKS-492 (type III), attenuated the neutrophilic airway inflammation induced by endotoxin. Aminophylline, SDZ-MKS-492, and a superoxide anion-generating NADPH-oxidase inhibitor apocynin inhibited bronchial hyperresponsiveness to substance P with attenuation of neutral endopeptidase inactivation induced by endotoxin. SDZ-ISQ-844, SDZ-MKS-492, and apocynin attenuated the elevation of lipid peroxides. The generation of hypochlorite (OCl-) from whole blood leukocytes was attenuated by aminophylline, SDZ-ISQ-844, SDZ-MKS-492, and apocynin at 1 to 2 h after exposure. These results suggest that reactive oxygen-derived free radical species-mediated oxidative lung injury may play an important role in endotoxin-induced bronchial hyperresponsiveness to substance P, and that phosphodiesterase isoenzyme inhibitors may be potentially useful as anti-inflammatory drugs.
Copyright 1998 Academic Press.