Abstract
Inflammation and immunity result in a wide range of disease processes, including chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, ischemia-reperfusion injury, atherosclerosis, vascular thrombosis and sepsis. Heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1) is a key enzyme that is indispensable for the temporal and spatial regulation of host response and, together with its essential metabolite carbon monoxide (CO), is crucial for maintaining homeostasis, inhibition of inflammation and the preservation of function and life. The biology of HO-1 is being discussed in this review series by Soares and colleagues and thus will not be reviewed here. Rather we will complement the HO-1 overview with a comprehensive discussion of CO as perhaps the one product of HO-1 that has been most studied. Of the numerous physiologic effects observed with CO, in the past five years it has become apparent that CO has been ascribed an additional novel role as a 'bactericidal agent'. Its role in the maintenance of homeostasis remains intact; however, the designation necessitates the paradoxical induction of the inflammatory response and binding to hemoproteins in order to restore homeostasis and sustain life. In this article, we review and discuss reports that have propelled and challenged the paradoxical use of CO, once viewed as a toxic molecule, now as a host defense molecule agent against microbes.
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