4.7 Article

Dexmedetomidine ameliorates endotoxin-induced acute lung injury in vivo and in vitro by preserving mitochondrial dynamic equilibrium through the HIF-1a/HO-1 signaling pathway

Journal

REDOX BIOLOGY
Volume 41, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.redox.2021.101954

Keywords

Dexmedetomidine; Endotoxin; Acute lung injury; Mitochondrial dynamics; Hypoxia-inducible factor 1; Heme oxygenase-1

Funding

  1. Youth Project of Tianjin Natural Science Foundation [18JCQNJC11000]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation [81772106]
  3. Youth research and cultivation foundation of Tianjin Society of Anesthesiology [TJMZJJ-2017-06]

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Research has shown that dexmedetomidine provides protection against sepsis-induced acute lung injury by regulating mitochondrial dynamics through the HIF-1a/HO-1 signaling pathway, reducing oxidative stress and improving mitochondrial dysfunction.
Increasing lines of evidence identified that dexmedetomidine (DEX) exerted protective effects against sepsisstimulated acute lung injury via anti-inflammation, anti-oxidation and anti-apoptosis. However, the mechanisms remain unclear. Herein, we investigated whether DEX afforded lung protection by regulating the process of mitochondrial dynamics through the HIF-1a/HO-1 pathway in vivo and in vitro. Using C57BL/6J mice exposed to lipopolysaccharide, it was initially observed that preemptive administration of DEX (50?g/kg) alleviated lung pathologic injury, reduced oxidative stress indices (OSI), improved mitochondrial dysfunction, upregulated the expression of HIF-1? and HO-1, accompanied by shifting the dynamic course of mitochondria into fusion. Moreover, HO-1-knockout mice or HO-1 siRNA transfected NR8383 cells were pretreated with HIF-1? stabilizer DMOG and DEX to validate the effect of HIF-1a/HO-1 pathway on DEX-mediated mitochondrial dynamics in a model of endotoxin-induced lung injury. We found that pretreatment with DEX and DMOG distinctly relieved lung injury, decreased the levels of mitochondrial ROS and mtDNA, reduced OSI, increased nuclear accumulation of HIF-1a and HO-1 protein in wild type mice but not HO-1 KO mice. Similar observations were recapitulated in NC siRNA transfected NR8383 cells after LPS stimulation but not HO-1 siRNA transfected cells. Concertedly, DEX reversed the impaired mitochondrial morphology in LPS stimulated-wild type mice or NC siRNA transfected NR8383 cells, upregulated the expression of mitochondrial fusion protein, while downregulated the expression of fission protein in HIF-1a/HO-1 dependent pathway. Altogether, our data both in vivo and in vitro certified that DEX treatment ameliorated endotoxin-induced acute lung injury by preserving the dynamic equilibrium of mitochondrial fusion/fission through the regulation of HIF-1a/HO-1 signaling pathway.

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