Exploring the mitigating potential of anthocyanin Malvidin in a mouse model of bleomycin-induced pulmonary fibrosis by inhibiting NLRP3 inflammasome activation and oxidative stress.
Dingzi Zhou, Lin Cai, Jie Xu, Daigang Fu, Ling Yan, Linshen Xie
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Malvidin (MV), an essential anthocyanin, has antioxidant and anti-inflammatory effects that may help treat pulmonary fibrosis (PF), a progressive and occasionally fatal condition characterized by severe lung scarring, oxidative stress, and inflammation.
Objective: This study aims to evaluate the therapeutic potential of MV in PF by assessing its effects on inflammation, oxidative stress, and fibrotic markers through in vitro and in vivo models.
Methods and materials: The compound was evaluated by molecular docking. BEAS-2B and RLE-6TN cells were treated with 200 µg/mL BLM to induce inflammation, followed by MV treatment. Cell viability, ROS levels, and wound healing were analyzed. In vivo, BLM-induced mice were evaluated to assess fibrotic and antioxidant biomarkers.
Results: MV interacted with NLRP3 with a binding energy of -7 kcal/mol. MV increased cell viability in BLM-induced cells, reducing ROS and oxidative stress. Wound healing was enhanced in MV-treated groups. A decrease in HYP proteins confirms MV's antifibrotic effects. In the mice model, MV reduced TXNIP, MDA, and MPO while increasing CAT, GSH, and SOD, confirming its antioxidant capacity.
Conclusion: MV alleviated PF in the BLM-induced model via the NLRP3 inflammasome pathway, demonstrating its potential as an antifibrotic and antioxidant agent.
期刊介绍:
Journal of Inflammation welcomes research submissions on all aspects of inflammation.
The five classical symptoms of inflammation, namely redness (rubor), swelling (tumour), heat (calor), pain (dolor) and loss of function (functio laesa), are only part of the story. The term inflammation is taken to include the full range of underlying cellular and molecular mechanisms involved, not only in the production of the inflammatory responses but, more importantly in clinical terms, in the healing process as well. Thus the journal covers molecular, cellular, animal and clinical studies, and related aspects of pharmacology, such as anti-inflammatory drug development, trials and therapeutic developments. It also considers publication of negative findings.
Journal of Inflammation aims to become the leading online journal on inflammation and, as online journals replace printed ones over the next decade, the main open access inflammation journal. Open access guarantees a larger audience, and thus impact, than any restricted access equivalent, and increasingly so, as the escalating costs of printed journals puts them outside University budgets. The unrestricted access to research findings in inflammation aids in promoting dynamic and productive dialogue between industrial and academic members of the inflammation research community, which plays such an important part in the development of future generations of anti-inflammatory therapies.