4.7 Article

Lycopene attenuates di(2-ethylhexyl) phthalate-induced mitophagy in spleen by regulating the sirtuin3-mediated pathway

Journal

FOOD & FUNCTION
Volume 12, Issue 10, Pages 4582-4590

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d0fo03277h

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31572586]
  2. Excellent Youth Foundation of Heilongjiang Province of China [JC2017005]
  3. China Agriculture Research System [CARS-35]

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The study found that DEHP exposure significantly upregulated the mRNA and protein expression of the sirtuin family, PGC-1 alpha, OPA1, Drp1, MFN1/2, NRF1, TFAM, Parkin and PINK, and SOD2 and LC3-II protein expression. These changes were accompanied by an increase in inflammatory cells, mitochondrial damage, and autophagosome formation in the spleen. Lycopene supplementation facilitated the return of these changes to normal levels, indicating its protective effects against DEHP-induced splenic toxicity.
Lycopene (Lyc) has been discussed as a potential effector in the prevention and therapy of various diseases. Di(2-ethylhexyl) phthalate (DEHP) is regarded as a universal environmental pollutant. To clarify the potential protective effect of Lyc on DEHP-induced splenic injury, 140 male mice were randomized into seven groups: control (distilled water), vehicle control (corn oil per day), Lyc (5 mg per kg BW per day), DEHP (500 or 1000 mg per kg BW per day), and DEHP combined Lyc group, respectively. All experimental animals were treated by oral gavage for 28 days. The results that showed DEHP exposure significantly up-regulated the mRNA and protein expression of the sirtuin family (except SIRT4-5), PGC-1 alpha, OPA1, Drp1, MFN1/2, NRF1, TFAM, Parkin and PINK in DEHP-treated alone groups and the SOD2 and LC3-II protein expression were also in accordance with the above changes. These were accompanied with an increase of the number of inflammatory cells and rate of mitochondrial damage, and autophagosome formation in the spleen. Notably, Lyc supplementation facilitated all these changes to effectively return to the normal level, indicating that Lyc exerts protective effects against DEHP-induced splenic toxicity. Altogether, the protective effects of Lyc may be a strategy to ameliorate DEHP-induced spleen damage.

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