Title of article
SNOR and wheeze: the asthma enzyme?
Author/Authors
Edward M. Henderson، نويسنده , , Benjamin Gaston، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages
4
From page
481
To page
484
Abstract
Conventionally, asthma is defined as involving both airway inflammation and airway smooth muscle hyper-responsiveness. However, Que and coworkers have recently uncoupled these concepts, showing that mice lacking an S-nitrosothiol reductase have allergen-induced airway inflammation but do not have airway hyper-responsiveness. These data are consistent with recent clinical evidence that: (i) S-nitrosothiol signaling is abnormal in human asthma, (ii) nitric oxide in exhaled air might be only a biomarker for the metabolism of more physiologically relevant nitrogen oxides and (iii) the biochemical response to airway inflammation is central to asthma pathophysiology.
Journal title
Trends in Molecular Medicine
Serial Year
2005
Journal title
Trends in Molecular Medicine
Record number
784356
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