2006 - 04

Inflamm Allergy Drug Targets. 2006 Apr;5(2):121-31.

NO-NSAIDs: from inflammatory mediators to clinical readouts.

Fiorucci S, Antonelli E. University of Perugia, Italy.

Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) and cyclo-oxygenase (COX)-2 selective inhibitors (COXIBs) are widely used drugs. However, their use is hampered by gastrointestinal, cardiovascular and renal side effects. Nitric oxide (NO)-releasing NSAIDs, NO-NSAID, are a new class of anti-inflammatory and analgesic drugs generated by adding a nitroxybutyl or a nitrosothiol moiety to the parent NSAID via a short-chain ester linkage. While efficacy of nitrosothiol-NSAIDs still awaits investigation, nitroxybutyl-NO-NSAIDs have been extensively studied in humans. The combination of balanced inhibition of the two main COX isoforms with release of NO confers to NO-NSAIDs reduced gastrointestinal and cardiorenal toxicity. It is suggested that the NO, which is released as the compounds are broken down, may counteract the consequences of the NSAID-induced decrease in gastric mucosal prostaglandins. Recent clinical trials with NO-NSAIDs have provided data consistent with pre-clinical observations.



Inflamm Allergy Drug Targets. 2006 Apr;5(2):115-9.

Nitric oxide and inflammation.

Cirino G, Distrutti E, Wallace JL. Department of Experimental Pharmacology, Universita di Napoli-Federico II, Napoli, Italy.

There are several pre-clinical studies on the involvement of NO in inflammation. From this large amount of information it is clear that virtually every cell and many immunological parameters are modulated by NO. Thus, the final outcome is that NO cannot be rigidly classified as an anti-inflammatory or pro-inflammatory molecule. This peculiar aspect of the pathophysiology of NO has hampered the development of new drugs based on the concepts developed. Recent therapeutic approach are targeted to increase endogenous NO by activating the gene and some promising early data are available. At the present stage one of the most promising approach in the inflammation field is represented by a new class of NO-releasing compounds namely NO-NSAIDs that have recently enrolled in phase 2 clinical studies.



Carcinogenesis. 2006 Apr;27(4):803-10. Epub 2005 Nov 2.

NO-donating aspirin induces phase II enzymes in vitro and in vivo.

Gao J, Kashfi K, Liu X, Rigas B. Division of Cancer Prevention, Department of Medicine, SUNY at Stony Brook, NY 11794, USA.

Modulation of drug metabolizing enzymes, leading to facilitated elimination of carcinogens represents a successful strategy for cancer chemoprevention. Nitric oxide-donating aspirin (NO-ASA) is a promising agent for the prevention of colon and other cancers. We studied the effect of NO-ASA on drug metabolizing enzymes in HT-29 human colon adenocarcinoma and Hepa 1c1c7 mouse liver adenocarcinoma cells and in Min mice treated with NO-ASA for 3 weeks. In these cell lines, NO-ASA induced the activity and expression of NAD(P)H:quinone oxireductase (NQO) and glutathione S-transferase (GST). Compared with untreated Min mice, NO-ASA increased in the liver the activity (nmol/min/mg; mean+/-SEM for all) of NQO (85+/-6 versus 128+/-11, P<0.05) and GST (2560+/-233 versus 4254+/-608, P<0.005) and also in the intestine but not in the kidney; the expression of NQO1 and GST P1-1 was also increased. NO-ASA had only a marginal effect on P450 1A1 and P450 2E1, two phase I enzymes. The release of NO from NO-ASA, determined with a selective microelectrode was paralleled by the induction of NQO1 and abrogated by NO scavengers; an exogenous NO donor also induced the expression of NQO1. NO-ASA induced concentration-dependently the translocation of Nrf2 into the nucleus as documented by immunofluorescence and immunoblotting; this paralleled the induction of NQO1 and GST P1-1. Thus NO-ASA induces phase II enzymes, at least in part, through the action of NO that it releases and by modulating the Keap1-Nrf2 pathway; this effect may be part of its mechanism of action against colon and other cancers.