o-(chloroacetylcarbamoyl)fumagillol and Mucocutaneous-Lymph-Node-Syndrome

o-(chloroacetylcarbamoyl)fumagillol has been researched along with Mucocutaneous-Lymph-Node-Syndrome* in 1 studies

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for o-(chloroacetylcarbamoyl)fumagillol and Mucocutaneous-Lymph-Node-Syndrome

ArticleYear
Suppression of coronary vasculitis in a murine model of Kawasaki disease using an angiogenesis inhibitor.
    Clinical immunology (Orlando, Fla.), 1999, Volume: 90, Issue:1

    Coronary arteritis can be induced in C57BL/6 mice with a single intraperitoneal (ip) injection of Lactobacillus casei cell fragments. Histologic sections resemble the vasculitis and aneurysms observed in the medium-sized coronary arteries of children with Kawasaki disease. Since endothelial cells could play an important role in the development of vasculitis, a recently described angiogenesis inhibitor that is not an immunosuppressive agent, AGM-1470 (derived from Aspergillus fumigatus), was used to evaluate its therapeutic potential in this model. A total of 32 mice were administered 0.5 mg of sterile L. casei preparation ip on day 0 and randomized to either a treatment (AGM-1470, 27mg/kg sc alternate days) or a control (vehicle only) protocol. Hearts were harvested on day 14 (early disease) or at the end of the study on day 28 (established disease). Histologic sections were scored blindly for vasculitis. Day 14 sections from both protocols manifested only minimal disease, indicating that the vasculitis had not yet matured. By day 28, the AGM-1470 group had significantly less coronary vasculitis than the control group (0.7 vs 2.6, p < 0.005, respectively). These studies suggest that endothelial cells may play an active role in this pathologic process and that angiogenesis inhibitors, such as AGM-1470, could be useful tools for the treatment and understanding of vasculitis.

    Topics: Animals; Arteritis; Coronary Vessels; Cyclohexanes; Disease Models, Animal; Female; Lacticaseibacillus casei; Mice; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Mucocutaneous Lymph Node Syndrome; Neovascularization, Pathologic; O-(Chloroacetylcarbamoyl)fumagillol; Sesquiterpenes

1999