4.5 Article

Dosage effects of resveratrol on thymus involution in D-galactose-treated mice

Journal

JOURNAL OF FOOD BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 45, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jfbc.13709

Keywords

d‐ galactose; FoxN1; resveratrol; thymus involution

Funding

  1. Key Scientific Research Project of Higher Education Institution in Henan Province [21A310022]

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Resveratrol has been proven to delay aging in many organs, including the thymus. This study explored the dosage-dependent effect of resveratrol on thymus involution in senescence-accelerated mice induced by D-galactose. The results showed that resveratrol can delay thymus atrophy within a certain dose range, but higher concentrations may have toxicity. FoxN1 may play a role in the beneficial mechanism of resveratrol supplementation, which is significant for enhancing thymus immunity.
The thymus regulates a specific microenvironment for the growth and maturation of naive T cells. Involution of immune function was an important factor during body aging. Preventing the senescence of immune organs has become a major medical issue. Resveratrol (RSV) has been proved to delay the aging of many organs including the thymus. However, the underlying mechanism remains indefinite and the dosages of RSV on thymus involution need to be further clarified. In the current study, the senescence-accelerated mice were produced using d-galactose for two months. RSV at different dosages (25, 50, 100 mg kg(-1) day(-1)) was then administered. The alteration of the thymic morphological structure was observed. It showed that three dosages of RSV significantly decreased cellular senescence of the thymus and no dosage difference was detected. For cellular proliferation and apoptosis of the thymus, 50 and 25 mg/kg per day of RSV displayed the best effects on cellular proliferation and apoptosis in the thymus, respectively. Furthermore, 50 mg/kg per day of RSV increased the expression of FoxN1 both at transcription and translation levels. These findings indicated that RSV could delay thymus atrophy in a dosage-dependent pattern and FoxN1 might involve in the beneficial mechanism of RSV, which was of great significance for the enhancement of thymic health and organic immunity. Practical applications Resveratrol has been proved to delay aging of many organs including of thymus. In the present study, we explored the dosage of resveratrol on thymus involution and the expression of transcription factors forkhead box protein N1 (FoxN1) in the senescenceaccelerated mice induced by D-galactose. The results indicated that resveratrol could delay thymus atrophy in a dosage-dependent pattern within a certain dose range, and higher RSV concentration may have drug toxicity, which suggests that the dosage of RSV requires attention, And FoxN1 might involve in the beneficial mechanism of resveratrol supplement, which was of great significance to explore the mechanism for the enhancement of thymus immunity.

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