This study aimed to investigate the possible therapeutic effects and active components of Lycium barbarum polysaccharides (LBP) on a high fat diet-induced NASH rat model. We induced NASH in a rat model by voluntary oral feeding with a high-fat diet ad libitum for 8 weeks. After 8 weeks, 1 mg/kg LBP was orally administered for another 4 weeks with a high-fat diet. When compared with NASH rats treated for 12 weeks, therapeutic LBP treatment for 4 weeks during 12 weeks of NASH induction showed ameliorative effects on: (1) increased body and wet liver weights; (2) insulin resistance and glucose metabolic dysfunction; (3) elevated level of serum aminotransferases; (4) fat accumulation in the liver and increased serum free fatty acid (FFA) level; (5) hepatic fibrosis; (6) hepatic oxidative stress; (7) hepatic inflammatory response; and (8) hepatic apoptosis. These improvements were partially through the modulation of transcription factor NF-κB, MAPK pathways and the autophagic process. In a palmitate acid-induced rat hepatocyte steatosis cell–based model, we also demonstrated that l-arabinose and β-carotene partially accounted for the beneficial effects of LBP on the hepatocytes. In conclusion, LBP possesses a variety of hepato-protective properties which make it a potent supplementary therapeutic agent against NASH in future clinical trials.
Intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) is associated with high mortality and disability, and hyperglycemia worsens the clinical and neurological outcomes of patients with ICH. In this study, we utilized proteomic approaches to investigate the role of hyperglycemia in ICH. Hyperglycemia was induced by intraperitoneal injection of streptozotocin (STZ) in adult Sprague-Dawley male rats; ICH was induced by stereotaxic infusion of collagenase/heparin into the right striatum. It was observed that the size of induced hemorrhage was significantly larger in the hyperglycemic group (n=6 in each group). On the first day after ICH, an apparent decrease in the bilateral grasp was also observed for the lesioned hyperglycemic rats compared with normoglycemic ones. When employing 2-DE and MS to examine the proteomes of perihematomal and control regions in individual hyperglycemic and normoglycemic rats, eight differentially expressed protein targets were identified. Most noteworthy, in response to ICH significant increase of albumin was ubiquitously observed in the brains of normoglycemic rats but not in the brains of hyperglycemic rats. Coincidentally, more significant neuronal apoptosis were found in the perihematomal regions of hyperglycemic rats. These observations described suggest the protection role of albumin in acute stage of ICH, which may be dependent on different blood sugar levels.
Anisomycin eminently inhibits cell proliferation in vitro. The aim of this study was to explore the potential of anisomycin to treat tumors in vivo and its mechanism(s) of action. The results showed that peritumoral administration of anisomycin significantly suppressed Ehrlich ascites carcinoma (EAC) growth resulting in the survival of approximately 60% of the mice 90 days after EAC inoculation. Enhancement of infiltrating lymphocytes was noted in the tumor tissue, which was dramatically superior to adriamycin. The growth inhibitory rate of EAC cells was enhanced with increasing concentrations of anisomycin, following an enhanced apoptotic rate. The total apoptotic rate induced by 160 ng/ml of anisomycin was higher when compared to that induced by 500 ng/ml of adriamycin. DNA breakage and nanostructure changes were also noted in the EAC cells. The levels of caspase-3 mRNA, caspase-3 and cleaved-caspase-3 proteins in the anisomycin‑treated EAC cells were augmented in a dose- and time-dependent manner, following the activation of caspase-8 and caspase-9, which finally triggered PARP cleavage. The cleaved-caspase-3, cleaved-caspase-8 and cleaved-caspase-9 proteins were mainly localized in the nuclei of the cells. These results indicate that anisomycin efficaciously represses in vitro and in vivo growth of EAC cells through caspase signaling, significantly superior to the effects of adriamycin. This suggests the potential of anisomycin for the treatment of breast cancer.
Abstract:Little is known about whether there is a relationshipbetweenPI3K/AKT, ERK1/2 and an inverted CCAAT box binding protein (ICBP90) in biological behaviours of tumour cells. The aim of this study was to determine thisusing Jurkat T cells. Compared to PD98059 (an ERK1/2 signaling inhibitor), DAPT (a Notch signaling inhibitor) or adriamycin (a classical anti-tumour drug), the inhibition of Jurkat T cell growth by LY294002 (a PI3K/Akt signaling inhibitor) was more obvious. LY294002 combined with adriamycin appeared to have a synergistic effect. LY294002 strongly blocked Jurkat T cells at each phase of cell cycle with a decrease of DNA content, superior to adriamycin. Consistent with these changes, the expression of phosphorylated ERK1/2 was markedly decreased in the LY294002-treated Jurkat T cells, leading to the reduction of ICBP90 production, followed by moderate attenuation of TGF-β secretion. The results suggest that deactivation of PI3K/Akt signalling can surpress Jurkat T cell growth through inhibiting cell proliferation and blocking the cell cycle. ICBP90 may mediate the PI3K/AKT-ERK1/2 signalling to regulate leukemia cell growth.
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