4.6 Article

Glaucocalyxin B inhibits cartilage inflammatory injury in rheumatoid arthritis by regulating M1 polarization of synovial macrophages through NF-κB pathway

Journal

AGING-US
Volume 13, Issue 18, Pages 22544-22555

Publisher

IMPACT JOURNALS LLC

Keywords

Glaucocalyxin B; rheumatoid arthritis; cartilage injury; NF-kappa B; macrophages

Funding

  1. Science and Technology Plan Project of Jiaxing [2021AD30118]

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The study found that Gla B can inhibit NF-kappa B signaling by regulating M1 polarization of SMG, thereby suppressing articular cartilage inflammation injury in RA. Additionally, Gla B can target the P65 protein and inhibit joint injury and inflammation in mice.
Background: Glaucocalyxin B (Gla B) is a type of sesquiterpenoids. At present, there are rare studies on the pharmacological effects and targets of sesquiterpenoids, while multiple sesquiterpenoids have good anti-inflammatory properties. Therefore, in this study, we aimed to investigate the mechanism of Gla B on macrophages and rheumatoid arthritis. Methods: LPS/IFN-gamma was used to induce M1 polarization of synovial macrophage (SMG) in vitro, followed by Gla B pretreatment (5 mu M and 15 mu M). Afterwards, flow cytometry was performed to detect the proportion of M1 cells (F4/80(+)CD86(+)), enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) was used to determine the expression levels of M1 cell markers (TNF-alpha, IL-1 beta, IL-6, iNOS and IL-12) as well as M2 cell markers (IL-10 and TGF-beta 1), immunofluorescence (IF) staining was utilized to measure the expression of CD86, the level of ROS was assessed by probe and Western blot was conducted to detect the expression of P65 and p-P65. M1 polarization was detected in SMG cells with P65 silencing after 15 mu M Gla B intervention. The culture medium from M1 cell was used to culture cartilage cells in vitro, followed by detection of cartilage cell injury. In animal models, collagen antibodies and LPS were combined to induce RA mouse model. Afterwards, H and E staining was performed to detect pathological changes in mouse joint synovium, safranin O-fast green staining was used to determine cartilage injury, and immunohistochemistry was utilized to detect CD86 and P65 expression. Small molecule-protein docking and co-immunoprecipitation (Co-IP) were used to verify the targeted binding relationship between Gal B and P65. Results: LPS and IFN-gamma could induce M1 polarization in SMG. Gal B could inhibit M1 polarization, decrease the levels of TNF-alpha, IL-1 beta, IL-6, iNOS and IL-12, inhibit the expression of P65 and p-P65 while did not affect the expression of IL-10 or TGF-beta 1. Gal B had no significant effect in SMG cells with P65 silencing. The small molecule-protein docking and Co-IP both showed that Gal B had a targeted binding relationship with P65, and Gal B could inhibit joint injury and inflammation in mice. Conclusion: Gal B could target the P65 protein. Moreover, Gal B could inhibit the inflammatory injury of articular cartilage in RA by regulating M1 polarization of SMG through inhibiting the NF-kappa B signaling.

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