4.6 Article

Cardiac senescence is alleviated by the natural flavone acacetin via enhancing mitophagy

Journal

AGING-US
Volume 13, Issue 12, Pages 16381-16403

Publisher

IMPACT JOURNALS LLC
DOI: 10.18632/aging.203163

Keywords

cardiac senescence; telomere length shortening; mitophagy; Sirt1; Sirt6; pAMPK

Funding

  1. Science and Technology Cooperation Fund across the Taiwan Straits of the National Natural Science Foundation of China [U1605226]

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The study shows that acacetin can alleviate cardiac senescence induced by D-galactose, improve heart function, enhance mitophagy, and preserve mitochondrial function by activating the Sirt1-mediated Sirt6/AMPK signaling pathway.
Cardiac senescence is associated with cardiomyopathy which is a degenerative disease in the aging process of the elderly. The present study investigates using multiple experimental approaches whether the natural flavone acacetin could attenuate myocardial senescence in C57/BL6 mice and H9C2 rat cardiac cells induced by D-galactose. We found that the impaired heart function in D-galactose-induced accelerated aging mice was improved by oral acacetin treatment in a dose-dependent manner. Acacetin significantly countered the increased serum advanced glycation end products, the myocardial telomere length shortening, the increased cellular senescence marker proteins p21 and p53, and the reduced mitophagy signaling proteins PINK1/Parkin and Sirt6 expression in aging mice. In H9C2 rat cardiac cells, acacetin alleviated cell senescence induced by D-galactose in a concentration-dependent manner. Acacetin decreased p21 and p53 expression, up-regulated PINK1/Parkin, LC3II/LC3I ratio, pLKB1, pAMPK and Sirt6, and reversed the depolarized mitochondrial membrane potential in aging cardiac cells. Mitophagy inhibition with 3-methyladenine or silencing Sirt6 abolished the protective effects of acacetin against cardiac senescence. Further analysis revealed that acacetin effect on Sirt6 was mediated by Sirt1 activation and increase of NAD(+)/NADH ratio. These results demonstrate that acacetin significantly inhibits in vivo and in vitro cardiac senescence induced by D-galactose via Sirt1-mediated activation of Sirt6/AMPK signaling pathway, thereby enhancing mitophagy and preserving mitochondrial function, which suggests that acacetin may be a drug candidate for treating cardiovascular disorders related to aging.

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