4.6 Article

Protective Effect of Quercetin 3-O-Glucuronide against Cisplatin Cytotoxicity in Renal Tubular Cells

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 27, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules27041319

Keywords

quercetin; quercetin 3-O-glucuronide; cisplatin; nephrotoxicity; cytoprotection

Funding

  1. Fundacion FUESCYL-Banco de Santander [Ed. 2014-2015 Desafio UNIV-EMP]
  2. Fundacion General de la Universidad de Salamanca
  3. Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional (FEDER)
  4. la Junta de Castilla y Leon [Ed. 2015 Lanzadera TC]
  5. Junta de Castilla y Leon [VA225U14, CLU-2018-04]
  6. Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion [PID2019-106167RB-I00]
  7. Consejeria de Educacion [SA093P20]

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Quercetin, a potential therapeutic substance, has shown protective effects against cisplatin nephrotoxicity in rats. However, its low bioavailability limits its clinical utility. A newly-developed P-quercetin formulation with enhanced solubility and bioavailability also showed no nephroprotection when administered orally. Further investigation revealed that the metabolite of quercetin may be responsible for the nephroprotective effects, and quercetin-3-O-glucuronide was the only metabolite partially preventing the cytotoxic effects of cisplatin in cultured tubule cells.
Quercetin, a flavonoid with promising therapeutic potential, has been shown to protect from cisplatin nephrotoxicity in rats following intraperitoneal injection, but its low bioavailability curtails its prospective clinical utility in oral therapy. We recently developed a micellar formulation (P-quercetin) with enhanced solubility and bioavailability, and identical nephroprotective properties. As a first aim, we herein evaluated the oral treatment with P-quercetin in rats, which displayed no nephroprotection. In order to unravel this discrepancy, quercetin and its main metabolites were measured by HPLC in the blood and urine after intraperitoneal and oral administrations. Whilst quercetin was absorbed similarly, the profile of its metabolites was different, which led us to hypothesize that nephroprotection might be exerted in vivo by a metabolic derivate. Consequently, we then aimed to evaluate the cytoprotective capacity of quercetin and its main metabolites (quercetin 3-O-glucoside, rutin, tamarixetin, isorhamnetin and quercetin 3-O-glucuronide) against cisplatin toxicity, in HK-2 and NRK-52E tubular cell lines. Cells were incubated for 6 h with quercetin, its metabolites or vehicle (pretreatment), and subsequently 18 h in cotreatment with 10-300 mu M cisplatin. Immediately after treatment, cell cultures were subject to the MTT technique as an index of cytotoxicity and photographed under light microscopy for phenotypic assessment. Quercetin afforded no direct cytoprotection and quercetin-3-O-glucuronide was the only metabolite partially preventing the effect of cisplatin in cultured tubule cells. Our results identify a metabolic derivative of quercetin contributing to its nephroprotection and prompt to further explore exogenous quercetin-3-O-glucuronide in the prophylaxis of tubular nephrotoxicity.

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