Role of Mitophagy in Cigarette Smoke-induced Lung Epithelial Cell Injury In Vitro

Current molecular medicine(2023)

引用 1|浏览5
暂无评分
摘要
Background: Mitochondria mediate airway inflammatory responses to cigarette smoke (CS). Removal of damaged or defective mitochondrial (mitophagy) may prevent the detrimental impact of CS extract (CSE) on airway and lung epithelial cells. Methods: We studied the effect of a mitophagy activator (Urolithin A, UA) and a mitophagy inhibitor (Liensinine diperchlorate, Ld) on CSE-exposed alveolar (A549) and airway (BEAS-2B) epithelial cell proliferation, intracellular and mitochondrial ROS, inflammatory response, mitochondrial membrane potential (Delta psi m), mitochondrial morphology, mitochondrial complex activities, and protein levels of mitochondrial fission (DRP1, MFF) and mitophagy (SQSTM1/p62, LC3B). In both cell types, CSE exposure led to increased intracellular and mitochondrial oxidative stress, decreased Delta psi m and resulted in structural disruption of the mitochondrial network. CSE increased the expression of DRP1, MFF and SQSTM1/p62 while decreasing LC3B-II/I protein expression ratio. CSE also increased inflammatory (IL-1 beta, IL-6, IL-18, CXCL1, CXCL8) and necroptosis factors (RIPK1, RIPK3, MLKL) mRNA expression. Results: Pre-treatment with UA attenuated CSE-induced oxidative stress, inflammatory and necroptosis gene expression and restored mitochondrial structure and function. UA also prevented CSE-evoked increases in DRP1, MFF and SQSTM1/p62 protein expression and increased LC3B-II/I ratio. Conversely, pre-treatment with Ld aggravated CSE-induced cellular and mitochondrial responses. Conclusion: In conclusion, mitophagy mediates CSE-induced damage and inflammation of lung epithelial cells and may represent a therapeutic target in CS-driven diseases.
更多
查看译文
关键词
Cigarette smoke,lung epithelial cell,mitochondria,mitophagy,necroptosis,COPD
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要