oxadiazoles and Fever

oxadiazoles has been researched along with Fever* in 3 studies

Other Studies

3 other study(ies) available for oxadiazoles and Fever

ArticleYear
Virtual screening and biological evaluation of novel antipyretic compounds.
    Chemical biology & drug design, 2017, Volume: 90, Issue:5

    Topics: Animals; Antipyretics; Dinoprostone; Drug Discovery; Fever; Humans; Hypothalamus; Ligands; Male; Oxadiazoles; Prostaglandin-E Synthases; Quantitative Structure-Activity Relationship; Rats, Wistar

2017
Propyretic role of the locus coeruleus nitric oxide pathway.
    Experimental physiology, 2010, Volume: 95, Issue:6

    Nitric oxide has been reported to modulate fever in the brain. However, the sites where NO exerts this modulation remain somewhat unclear. Locus coeruleus (LC) neurons express not only nitric oxide synthase (NOS) but also soluble guanylyl cyclase (sGC). In the present study, we evaluated in vivo and ex vivo the putative role of the LC NO-cGMP pathway in fever. To this end, deep body temperature was measured before and after pharmacological modulations of the pathway. Moreover, nitrite/nitrate (NOx) and cGMP levels in the LC were assessed. Conscious rats were microinjected within the LC with a non-selective NOS inhibitor (N(G)-monomethyl-l-arginine acetate), a NO donor (NOC12), a sGC inhibitor (1H-[1,2,4]oxadiazolo[4,3-a]quinoxalin-1-one) or a cGMP analogue (8-bromo-cGMP) and injected intraperitoneally with endotoxin. Inhibition of NOS or sGC before endotoxin injection significantly increased the latency to the onset of fever. During the course of fever, inhibition of NOS or sGC attenuated the febrile response, whereas microinjection of NOC12 or 8-bromo-cGMP increased the response. These findings indicate that the LC NO-cGMP pathway plays a propyretic role. Furthermore, we observed a significant increase in NOx and cGMP levels, indicating that the febrile response to endotoxin is accompanied by stimulation of the NO-cGMP pathway in the LC.

    Topics: Animals; Cyclic GMP; Endotoxins; Fever; Guanylate Cyclase; Locus Coeruleus; Male; NG-Nitroarginine Methyl Ester; Nitric Oxide; Nitroso Compounds; Oxadiazoles; Quinoxalines; Rats; Rats, Wistar; Receptors, Cytoplasmic and Nuclear; Soluble Guanylyl Cyclase

2010
Carbon monoxide is the heme oxygenase product with a pyretic action: evidence for a cGMP signaling pathway.
    American journal of physiology. Regulatory, integrative and comparative physiology, 2001, Volume: 280, Issue:2

    We have recently reported that the central heme oxygenase (HO) pathway has an important role in the genesis of lipopolysaccharide fever. However, the HO product involved, i.e., biliverdine, free iron, or carbon monoxide (CO), has not yet been identified with certainty. Therefore, in the present study, we tested the thermoregulatory effects of all HO products. Body core temperature (T(c)) and gross activity of awake, freely moving rats was measured by biotelemetry. Intracerebroventricular administration of heme-lysinate (152 nmol), which induces the HO pathway, evoked a marked increase in T(c), a response that was attenuated by intracerebroventricular pretreatment with the HO inhibitor zinc deuteroporphyrin 2,4-bis glycol (200 nmol), indicating that an HO product has a pyretic action in the central nervous system (CNS) of rats. Besides, heme-lysinate also increased gross activity, but no correlation was found between this effect and the increase in T(c). Moreover, intracerebroventricular biliverdine or iron salts at 152 nmol, a dose at which heme-lysinate was effective in increasing T(c), produced no change in T(c). Accordingly, intracerebroventricular treatment with the iron chelator deferoxamine elicited no change in basal T(c) and did not affect heme-induced pyresis. However, heme-induced pyresis was completely prevented by the soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC) inhibitor 1H-[1,2,4]oxadiazolo[4,3,-a]quinoxaline-1-one. Because biliverdine and iron had no thermoregulatory effects and CO produces most of its actions via sGC, these data strongly imply that CO is the only HO product with a pyretic action in the CNS.

    Topics: Animals; Biliverdine; Body Temperature Regulation; Brain; Carbon Dioxide; Cerebral Ventricles; Deferoxamine; Deuteroporphyrins; Enzyme Inhibitors; Escherichia coli; Fever; Heme Oxygenase (Decyclizing); Injections, Intraventricular; Iron; Lipopolysaccharides; Male; Oxadiazoles; Quinoxalines; Rats; Rats, Wistar

2001