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  • Title: Chloroquine antagonizes the proinflammatory cytokine response to opportunistic fungi by alkalizing the fungal phagolysosome.
    Author: Weber SM, Levitz SM.
    Journal: J Infect Dis; 2001 Mar 15; 183(6):935-42. PubMed ID: 11237811.
    Abstract:
    Recent observations demonstrated that the antimalarial drug chloroquine (CQ) can kill the opportunistic fungus Cryptococcus neoformans. Since CQ blunts lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha release, it was hypothesized that this drug would also interfere with the inflammatory response to C. neoformans and Candida albicans, another fungal opportunist. CQ inhibited TNF-alpha release from peripheral blood mononuclear cells from healthy and human immunodeficiency virus-positive donors without affecting NF-kappaB activation. CQ reduced TNF-alpha mRNA levels by a pH-dependent mechanism in a manner similar to 2 unrelated alkalizing drugs (ammonium chloride and bafilomycin), which also inhibited TNF-alpha gene expression. Although CQ inhibited release of interleukin (IL)-1beta and IL-6, it did not affect IL-10 or macrophage inflammatory protein-1alpha production. Thus, CQ interferes with fungus-induced TNF-alpha expression by a mechanism that probably depends on the alkalization of endolysosomes. This contrasts with CQ's reported pH-independent inhibition of LPS-stimulated TNF-alpha release and suggests that the mechanism of CQ's anti-inflammatory effects is stimulus specific.
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