Reddy Narsa M, Suryanaraya Vegiraju, Yates Melinda S, Kleeberger Steven R, Hassoun Paul M, Yamamoto Masayuki, Liby Karen T, Sporn Michael B, Kensler Thomas W, Reddy Sekhar P
Department of Environmental Health Sciences, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland 21205, USA.
Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2009 Nov 1;180(9):867-74. doi: 10.1164/rccm.200905-0670OC. Epub 2009 Aug 13.
Oxygen supplementation (e.g., hyperoxia) is used to support critically ill patients with noninfectious and infectious acute lung injury (ALI); however, hyperoxia exposure can potentially further contribute to and/or perpetuate preexisting ALI. Thus, developing novel therapeutic agents to minimize the side effects of hyperoxia is essential to improve the health of patients with severe ALI and respiratory dysfunction. We have previously shown that mice with a genetic disruption of the Nrf2 transcription factor, which squelches cellular stress by up-regulating the induction of several antioxidant enzymes and proteins, have greater susceptibility to hyperoxic lung injury. Moreover, we have recently demonstrated that Nrf2-deficiency impairs the resolution of lung injury and inflammation after nonlethal hyperoxia exposure.
To test the hypothesis that amplification of endogenous Nrf2 activity would prevent or dampen ALI induced by hyperoxia.
Here, we tested our hypothesis using a synthetic triterpenoid compound CDDO-imidazole (CDDO-Im) (1-[2-cyano-3-,12-dioxooleana-1,9(11)-dien-28-oyl] imidazole) in Nrf2-sufficient and Nrf2-deficient mice subjected to hyperoxia-induced ALI.
We demonstrate that oral administration of CDDO-Im at a dose of 30 micromol/kg body weight during the hyperoxic exposure is sufficient to markedly attenuate hyperoxia-induced ALI in Nrf2-sufficient but not Nrf2-deficient mice. This protection by the CDDO-Im against hyperoxic insult was accompanied by increased levels of Nrf2-regulated cytoprotective gene expression and reduced levels of DNA damage in the lung.
These results suggest that up-regulation of Nrf2 signaling by CDDO-Im or its analogs may provide a novel therapeutic strategy to minimize the adverse effects of hyperoxia.
补充氧气(如高氧)用于支持患有非感染性和感染性急性肺损伤(ALI)的重症患者;然而,暴露于高氧环境可能会进一步加重和/或使已有的ALI持续存在。因此,开发新型治疗药物以尽量减少高氧的副作用对于改善重症ALI和呼吸功能障碍患者的健康至关重要。我们之前已经表明,Nrf2转录因子发生基因破坏的小鼠,其通过上调几种抗氧化酶和蛋白质的诱导来抑制细胞应激,对高氧性肺损伤更敏感。此外,我们最近证明,Nrf2缺乏会损害非致死性高氧暴露后肺损伤和炎症的消退。
检验内源性Nrf2活性增强可预防或减轻高氧诱导的ALI这一假说。
在此,我们在遭受高氧诱导ALI的Nrf2充足和Nrf2缺乏的小鼠中,使用合成三萜类化合物CDDO-咪唑(CDDO-Im)(1-[2-氰基-3,12-二氧代齐墩果-1,9(11)-二烯-28-酰基]咪唑)来检验我们的假说。
我们证明,在高氧暴露期间以30微摩尔/千克体重的剂量口服CDDO-Im足以显著减轻Nrf2充足但非Nrf2缺乏小鼠的高氧诱导的ALI。CDDO-Im对高氧损伤的这种保护作用伴随着肺中Nrf2调节的细胞保护基因表达水平的增加和DNA损伤水平的降低。
这些结果表明,CDDO-Im或其类似物上调Nrf2信号通路可能提供一种新型治疗策略,以尽量减少高氧的不良影响。