4.6 Article

Gastrodin Exerts Cardioprotective Action via Inhibition of Insulin-Like Growth Factor Type 2/Insulin-Like Growth Factor Type 2 Receptor Expression in Cardiac Hypertrophy

Journal

ACS OMEGA
Volume 6, Issue 26, Pages 16763-16774

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsomega.1c00797

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81560589, 30960450, 81960662, 81402991]
  2. Yunnan Provincial Science and Technology Department [2014BC012, 2014IA033, 2017FE467-019, 2017IC041, 2017FA043, 2018FE001(-026), 2019FE001(-133), 2018HC007]
  3. Open Research Foundation of Yunnan Key Laboratory of Bioactive Peptides in Yunnan Province [AMHD-2017-3]
  4. Open Research Foundation of Yunnan Key Laboratory of Pharmacology for Nature Products [2019G001]
  5. Yunnan Provincial Education Department [ZD2015009, 2018JS163, 2018JS161]
  6. Natural Science Foundation of Guangxi [2018GXNSFAA281052]
  7. Special Fund for Talents of Guangxi [AD18281012]
  8. program Innovative Research Team in Science and Technology in Yunnan Province [202005AE160004]
  9. program Innovative Research Team in Science and Technology in Kunming Medical University [CXTD202003]

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In this study, a mouse model of myocardial hypertrophy induced by Ang II was established, and RNA sequencing combined with bioinformatics analysis identified key differentially expressed genes (DEGs) involved in GAS's inhibition of abnormal gene expression induced by Ang II in the heart. Functional verification further demonstrated that GAS protects against cardiac hypertrophy by influencing the IGF2/IGF2R pathway.
Pathological cardiac hypertrophy is commonly associated with an upregulation of fetal genes, fibrosis, cardiac dysfunction, and heart failure. Previous studies have demonstrated that gastrodin (GAS) exerts cardioprotective action in the treatment of cardiac hypertrophy. However, the mechanism by which GAS protects against cardiac hypertrophy is yet to be elucidated. A mouse model of myocardial hypertrophy was established using an angiotensin II (Ang II) induction. GAS (5 or 50 mg/kg/d) was orally administered every day starting 7 days prior to the Ang II infusion combined with sham-operated controls. Heart samples from each group were collected for RNA sequencing. Using bioinformatics analysis, the key differentially expressed genes (DEGs) that are involved in reversing cardiac function were identified. Through bioinformatics analysis, the key DEGs that are involved in GAS's inhibition of Ang II-induced abnormal gene expression within the heart were identified. This was further validated using quantitative real-time PCR and Western blotting in neonatal rat cardiomyocytes (NRCMs). Oral administration of GAS significantly suppressed the Ang II-induced increase in heart size and heart weight to body weight. Furthermore, pretreatment of the NRCMs with GAS led to a dose-dependent inhibition of Ang II-induced increases in Nppb mRNA expression. We identified 620 upregulated and 87 downregulated Ang II-induced DEGs II, among which the expression patterns of 58 and 146 genes were inverted by low-dose and high-dose GAS, respectively. These inverted DEGs were found to be mainly enriched in the biological processes of regulation of Ras protein signal transduction, heart contraction, covalent chromatin modification, glucose metabolism, and positive regulation of cell cycle. Among them, the insulin-like growth factor type 2 (Igf 2) gene, which was found to be highly reversed and downregulated by GAS, served as a core gene linking energy metabolism, immune regulation, and systemic development. Subsequent functional verification demonstrated that IGF2, and its receptor IGF2R, is one of the targets of GAS that helps protect against cardiac hypertrophy. Taken together, we have identified, for the first time, IGF2/IGF2R as a potential target influenced by GAS in the prevention of cardiac hypertrophy.

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