Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://ir.swu.ac.th/jspui/handle/123456789/17225
Title: Unripe carica papaya protects methylglyoxal-invoked endothelial cell inflammation and apoptosis via the suppression of oxidative stress and AKt/MAPK/NF-κB signals
Authors: Jarisarapurin W.
Kunchana K.
Chularojmontri L.
Wattanapitayakul S.K.
Issue Date: 2021
Abstract: Methylglyoxal (MGO), a highly reactive dicarbonyl compound, causes endothelial oxida-tive stress and vascular complications in diabetes. Excessive MGO-induced ROS production triggers eNOS uncoupling, inflammatory responses, and cell death signaling cascades. Our previous study reported that unripe Carica papaya (UCP) had antioxidant activities that prevented H2 O2-induced endothelial cell death. Therefore, this study investigated the preventive effect of UCP on MGO-induced endothelial cell damage, inflammation, and apoptosis. The human endothelial cell line (EA.hy926) was pretreated with UCP for 24 h, followed by MGO-induced dicarbonyl stress. Treated cells were evaluated for intracellular ROS/O2•− formation, cell viability, apoptosis, NO releases, and cell signaling through eNOS, iNOS, COX-2, NF-κB, Akt, MAPK (JNK and p38), and AMPK/SIRT1 autophagy pathways. UCP reduced oxidative stress and diminished phosphorylation of Akt, stress-activated MAPK, leading to the decreases in NF-kB-activated iNOS and COX-2 expression. However, UCP had no impact on the autophagy pathway (AMPK and SIRT1). Although UCP pretreatment decreased eNOS phosphorylation, the amount of NO production was not altered. The signaling of eNOS and NO production were decreased after MGO incubation, but these effects were unaffected by UCP pretreatment. In summary, UCP protected endothelial cells against carbonyl stress by the mechanisms related to ROS/O2•− scavenging activities, suppression of inflammatory signaling, and inhibition of JNK/p38/apoptosis pathway. Thus, UCP shows considerable promise for developing novel functional food and nutraceutical products to reduce risks of endothelial inflammation and vascular complications in diabetes. © 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
URI: https://ir.swu.ac.th/jspui/handle/123456789/17225
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85110721551&doi=10.3390%2fantiox10081158&partnerID=40&md5=335d320878f5e8f464e8e0dd70bac175
ISSN: 20763921
Appears in Collections:Scopus 1983-2021

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