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Erythromycin inhibits Cl secretion across canine tracheal epithelial cells.

Jun Tamaoki, +4 more
- 01 Feb 1992 - 
- Vol. 5, Iss: 2, pp 234-238
TLDR
The results indicate that erythromycin may selectively inhibit Cl secretion across airway epithelium through the inhibition of prostaglandin synthesis and suggest that this action possibly reflects its clinical efficacy in the treatment of airway hypersecretion.
Abstract
We studied the effect of the macrolide antibiotic erythromycin on bioelectrical properties of canine cultured tracheal epithelium under short-circuit conditions in vitro. Addition of erythromycin to the submucosal but not to the mucosal side dose-dependently decreased short-circuit current (Isc), the maximal decrease from the baseline value and the concentration required to produce a half-maximal effect (IC50) being 5.6 +/- 1.0 microA.cm-2 (mean +/- SE, p less than 0.001) and 18 microM, respectively. In contrast, other antibiotics including ampicillin, cephazolin and tetracycline were without effect. The erythromycin-induced decrease in Isc was not altered by amiloride, but it was abolished by bumetanide, diphenylamine-2-carboxylate2, and substitution of Cl in the bathing medium with gluconate (p less than 0.001, in each case). The effect of erythromycin on epithelial Isc was attenuated by pretreatment of cells with indomethacin but not with AA-861 a lipoxygenase inhibitor. Incubation of cells with erythromycin inhibited the release of prostaglandins E2 and F2 alpha from tracheal epithelial cells. These results indicate that erythromycin may selectively inhibit Cl secretion across airway epithelium through the inhibition of prostaglandin synthesis and suggest that this action possibly reflects its clinical efficacy in the treatment of airway hypersecretion.

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Citations
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Improvement of Survival in Patients with Diffuse Panbronchiolitis Treated with Low-dose Erythromycin

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Anti-inflammatory effects of macrolides—an underappreciated benefit in the treatment of community-acquired respiratory tract infections and chronic inflammatory pulmonary conditions?

TL;DR: Research into macrolide immunomodulation for chronic pulmonary disorders demonstrates consistent positive effects, although of types other than seen with diffuse panbronchiolitis, which has the potential to make them a useful option.
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A pilot study of low-dose erythromycin in bronchiectasis.

TL;DR: The results of this pilot study show that low-dose erythromycin improves lung function and sputum volume in bronchiectasis.
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The Effects of Macrolides on Inflammatory Cells

Jun Tamaoki
- 01 Feb 2004 - 
TL;DR: The action of macrolides on neutrophil accumulation, immune complex-mediated production of nitric oxide, mucin production, and the expanded therapeutic role of Macrolides as biological response modifiers are discussed.
References
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Journal Article

Antibiotic uptake by alveolar macrophages.

TL;DR: Detailed characterization of clindamycin uptake confirmed that the drug is accumulated by an active transport system, and should provide information useful in establishing guidelines for optimal antibiotic usage.
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Erythromycin inhibits respiratory glycoconjugate secretion from human airways in vitro.

TL;DR: Erythromycin was noted to reduce both spontaneous and stimulated RGC secretion from airways in culture, and the blocking effect appeared to be more selective for histamine than methacholine, which was not associated with any toxicity to the tissues.
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Effects of 'loop' diuretics on ion transport by dog tracheal epithelium

TL;DR: The "loop" diuretics MK-196, bumetanide, piretanide, and furosemide are all potent inhibitors of Cl transport by the dog's tracheal epithelium.
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Electrical properties of dog tracheal epithelial cells grown in monolayer culture

TL;DR: These monolayer cultures maintain electrical properties resembling those of the original tissue, which may prove useful for the study of water and ion transport by airway epithelia.
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Modification of Na and Cl transport in canine tracheal mucosa by prostaglandins.

TL;DR: Although effects of PGF2 alpha and PGE1 are similar as pertains to net Cl secretion, they differ in their effects on Na transport and their capacity to increase cAMP levels, suggesting that endogenous prostaglandins may have an important regulatory role in ion transport by airways epithelium.
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