Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2551337 Life Sciences 2014 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

AimsThe diverse physiological functions of histamine are mediated through distinct histamine receptors. In this study we investigated the role of H2R and H4R in the effects of histamine on the production of reactive oxygen species by phagocytes in whole blood.Main methodsChanges in reactive oxygen species (ROS) production by whole blood phagocytes after treatment with histamine, H4R agonists (4-methylhistamine, VUF8430), H2R agonist (dimaprit) and their combinations with H4R antagonist (JNJ10191584) and H2R antagonist (ranitidine) were determined using the chemiluminescence (CL) assay. To exclude the direct scavenging effects of the studied compounds on the CL response, the antioxidant properties of all compounds were measured using several methods (TRAP, ORAC, and luminol–HRP–H2O2 based CL).Key findingsHistamine, 4-methylhistamine, VUF8430 and dimaprit inhibited the spontaneous and OZP-activated whole blood CL in a dose-dependent manner. On the other hand, only VUF8430 was able to inhibit PMA-activated whole blood CL. Ranitidine, but not JNJ10191584, completely reduced the effects of histamine, 4-methylhistamine and dimaprit. The direct scavenging ability of tested compounds was negligible.SignificanceOur results demonstrate that the inhibitory effects of histamine on ROS production in whole blood phagocytes were caused by H2R. Our results also suggest that H4R agonists in concentrations higher than 10− 6 M may also influence ROS production via binding to H2R.

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