| Literature DB >> 24116277 |
Yong Kwan Kim1, Hye Hyeon Yoon, Young Dae Lee, Dong-Ye Youn, Tae Joung Ha, Ho-Shik Kim, Jeong-Hwa Lee.
Abstract
Anthocyanins have received growing attention as dietary antioxidants for the prevention of oxidative damage. Astrocytes, which are specialized glial cells, exert numerous essential, complex functions in both healthy and diseased central nervous system (CNS) through a process known as reactive astrogilosis. Therefore, the maintenance of glial cell viability may be important because of its role as a key modulator of neuropathological events. The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of anthocyanin on the survival of glial cells exposed to oxidative stress. Our results demonstrated that anthocyanin extracts from black soybean increased survival of U87 glioma cells in a dose dependent manner upon oxygen-glucose deprivation (OGD), accompanied by decrease levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS). While treatment cells with anthocyanin extracts or OGD stress individually activated autophagy induction, the effect was significantly augmented by pretreatment cells with anthocyanin extracts prior to OGD. The contribution of autophagy induction to the protective effects of anthocyanin was verified by the observation that silencing the Atg5 expression, an essential regulator of autophagy induction, reversed the cytoprotective effect of anthocyanin extracts against OGD stress. Treatment of U87 cells with rapamycin, an autophagy inducer, increased cell survival upon OGD stress comparable to anthocyanin, indicating that autophagy functions as a survival mechanism against oxidative stress-induced cytotoxicity in glial cells. Our results, therefore, provide a rationale for the use of anthocyanin as a preventive agent for brain dysfunction caused by oxidative damage, such as a stroke.Entities:
Keywords: Anthocyanin; Glial cells; Oxygen-glucose deprivation
Year: 2012 PMID: 24116277 PMCID: PMC3792204 DOI: 10.4062/biomolther.2012.20.1.068
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomol Ther (Seoul) ISSN: 1976-9148 Impact factor: 4.634
Fig. 1.Anthocyanin from black soybean increased survival of U87 cells upon OGD with decrease in ROS accumulation. (A) The effect of anthocyanin extracts on the growth rate of U87 cells was determined after incubation with 0, 50, or 100 μg/ml of black soybean anthocyanin extracts (BSAE) for 72 h. (B) The effects of anthocyanin on the survival of U87 cells were examined by pretreatment with BSAE at a concentration of 25, 50 or 100 μg/ml before exposure to OGD (B). The viability was determined by MTT assay as described in materials and methods. The value from control cells, BSAE-untreated cells (A) or OGD-untreated cells (B) was set to 100% for relative viability. Values are presented as mean ± S.D. from three independent experiments. (C) Intracellular ROS levels were determined by measuring DCF-DA fluorescence intensity using flow cytometric analysis. The representative (up) and quantitative (down) results for Intracellular ROS levels after OGD in the absence or presence of 100 μg/ml of BSAE. The fold changes in the mean intensities from three experiments were provided as mean ± S.D. (***p<0.001).
Fig. 2.Anthocyanin extracts promotes autophagy induction under OGD stress. (A) Western assay for LC3 proteins were performed with cell lysates after OGD with or without black soybean anthocyanin extracts (BSAE, 100 μg/ml). Beta-actin was detected as a loading control. (B) The intensities of LC-II over LC-I was mea-sured by densitometric analysis. The mean values from three independent experiments (± S.D) were shown after arbitrarily setting the value from control cells as 1.0. (*p<0.05, **p<0.01).
Fig. 3.Inhibition of autophagy reverses the protective effect of anthocyanin extracts on the OGD-induced cell death. (A) U87 cells were transfected with control siRNA (siCon) or Atg5 siRNA (siAtg5) for 48 h and the expression levels of endogenous Atg5 were examinedby western blot analysis. (B) The relative survival of U87 cells transfected with control siRNA or Atg5 siRNA with or without BSAE under OGD stress was determined by MTT assay. The value from control cells treated with control siRNA not exposed to OGD was set as 100%. (C) The effect of rapamycin on the survival of U87 cells upon OGD was examined. Prior to exposure to OGD, indicated dose of rapamycin was added to U87 cells for 1 h. After 5 h of OGD stress, the viability was determined by MTT assay. Bars represent means ± S.D from three independent experiments. (***p<0.001).