| Literature DB >> 32082188 |
Mariapaola Nitti1, Anna Lisa Furfaro1, Giovanni E Mann2.
Abstract
Among antioxidants in the human body, bilirubin has been recognized over the past 20 years to afford protection against different chronic conditions, including inflammation and cardiovascular disease. Moderate increases in plasma concentration and cellular bilirubin generation from metabolism of heme via heme oxygenase (HMOX) in virtually all tissues can modulate endothelial and vascular function and exert antioxidant and anti-inflammatory roles. This review aims to provide an up-to-date and critical overview of the molecular mechanisms by which bilirubin derived from plasma or from HMOX1 activation in vascular cells affects endothelial function. Understanding the molecular actions of bilirubin may critically improve the management not only of key cardiovascular diseases, but also provide insights into a broad spectrum of pathologies driven by endothelial dysfunction. In this context, therapeutic interventions aimed at mildly increasing serum bilirubin as well as bilirubin generated endogenously by endothelial HMOX1 should be considered.Entities:
Keywords: HMOX1; atherosclerosis; bilirubin; diabetes; endothelial cells; hypertension; obesity; tumor
Year: 2020 PMID: 32082188 PMCID: PMC7000760 DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2020.00023
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Physiol ISSN: 1664-042X Impact factor: 4.566
FIGURE 1Enzymatic reactions modulated to increase bilirubin generation and cytoprotection. HMOX1 catalyzes the degradation of heme groups to CO, Fe2+ and biliverdin, the latter subsequently converted to bilirubin by BLVRA. By reaction with oxidant species, bilirubin is oxidized back to biliverdin, amplifying the antioxidant effect. Bilirubin is also the substrate of CYP2A6 responsible for its oxidation to biliverdin. Bilirubin and CO exert anti-apoptotic and anti-inflammatory activity. Fe2+ is quenched by the heavy chain of ferritin, and further released to form heme. In addition to iron availability, the synthesis of heme groups depends on the activity of ALAs that catalyzes the reaction between succinyl-CoA and glycine to form 5’ALA; this is then converted to porphobilinogen and protoporphyrin IX that forms heme. Heme groups can also derived from the constitutive turnover of hemoproteins that can be amplified by cell damage. A positive feedback of cytoprotection can be generated by the ability of bilirubin to bind nucleophiles such as thiol reactive cysteines on Keap1, favoring Nrf2-dependent HMOX1 gene transcription. References in brackets.
FIGURE 2Functional effects of bilirubin on endothelial cells. Positive loop between plasma- and HMOX1 derived bilirubin is shown highlighting the main activities in maintaining endothelial function. The ability to reduce oxidative stress by quenching both O2–. and ONOO– prevents the dysfunction due to HG or AngII. The increased bioavailability of NO favors vascular relaxation and further activates HMOX1. The direct activity of bilirubin and HMOX1 in preventing the expression of adhesion molecules (VCAM, ICAM, E-selectin) is showed as well as the generation of angiogenetic factors (VEGF, IL-8, VEGF soluble receptor). A further contribution from VSMC-derived bilirubin has been hypothesized. References in brackets.
FIGURE 3Modulation of bilirubin production can affect a broad range of pathologies driven by endothelial dysfunction. Schematic representation of pathophysiological processes influenced by the ability of bilirubin to modulate endothelial function. In the upper part, diseases prevented by bilirubin are shown; in the lower part, conditions favored by locally generated bilirubin are indicated. References in brackets.
Bilirubin affects vascular cell functions: In vivo and ex vivo studies.
| Experimental model | Plasma bilirubin concentration (mg/dl) or μM | Main findings | References |
| C57BL/6J mice | 0.9–1 mg/dl | Bilirubin i.v. infusion (37.2 mg/kg) or indinavir induce moderate hyperbilirubinemia and prevent AngII dependent hypertension | |
| Gunn rats | 117.9 ± 9.8 μM | Pathophysiological concentrations of UCB protects animals from hypertensive effects of AngII by reducing oxidative stress | |
| Human plasma | 15 μM | The addition of bilirubin to human plasma samples reduces peroxynitrite-induced protein modifications | |
| C57BL/6J mice | 1–1.2 mg/dl | Moderate elevations in unconjugated bilirubin are able to preserve renal hemodynamics in AngII-dependent hypertension. | |
| C57BL/6J mice | 1–2 mg/dl | Mild hyperbilirubinemia induced by UGTA1A1 antisense decreases AngII-induced hypertension inhibition superoxide generation | |
| Old male SHRs or WKY rats | Serum content not modified | Up-regulation of HMOX1, through the generation of bilirubin, improves endothelial function favors vessel relaxation in a rat model of spontaneous hypertension | |
| Diabetic patients with or without GS | 1.3–1.6 mg/dl | Patients with diabetes and GS show a lower prevalence of vascular complications than diabetic patients | |
| Diabetic patients (Hisayama study) | 0.89–1.1 mg/dl | Patients with plasma bilirubin concentration in the highest quartile show a reduced prevalence of diabetic retinopathy | |
| Diabetic patients (type 2 DM) | 0.80 ± 0.39 mg/dl | Serum total bilirubin concentration negatively correlated with the severity of retinopathy | |
| STZ-induced diabetic rats | 3.3 mg/dl | Up-regulation of HMOX1 activity induced by CoPPIX by increasing bilirubin concentration reduces endothelial damage in diabetic animals | |
| STZ-induced diabetic Gunn rats | 7.01 ± 0.43 mg/dl | Hyperbilirubinemic rats are protects against renal diabetic complications | |
| db/db mice | Not significant increases | Biliverdin (5 mg/kg) protects diabetic mice toward renal complications | |
| db/db mice | 200 nM | HMOX1 induction and BLVRA activation prevent endothelial damage in diabetes, through the modulation of Akt pathway | |
| db/db and DIO mice | Not evaluated | HMOX1 activation (CoPPIX 10–20 mg/kg, i.p.) and Bilirubin (20 μmoli/kg i.p.) reduce hyperglycemia and increase insulin sensitivity | |
| T2DM patients | 64 ± 21 μM | Short-term treatment with atazanavir inhibits UGT1A1 activity induces a mild hyperbilirubinemia and ameliorates endothelial functions | |
| Healthy human subjects | <0.5 mg/dl | Low levels of plasma bilirubin are associated with a high prevalence of ischemic modifications in brain white matter | |
| MCAO rats | Not evaluated | Biliverdin administration (35 mg/kg i.p.) significantly reduces the cerebral infarct size | |
| “ | Not applicable | Treatment with bilirubin ditaurate (BRT, 50 μM) prevents ischemia/reperfusion damage. The infarct size shows negative correlation with BRT tissue content | |
| Rat model of coronary ischemia | Not evaluated | Intraperitoneal injection of bilirubin (10 mg/kg) decreases heart infarct size | |
| C57BL/6 mice | Not evaluated | Preconditioning performed using nanoparticles of PEG-bilirubin (10 mg/kg) attenuates IRI-associated hepatocellular injury | |
| GS and age-/gender-matched healthy controls and obese female type 2 diabetes patients | >17.1 μM (1 mg/dl) | Mild hyperbilirubinemia protects from age-related weight gain and dyslipidaemia. | |
| GS subjects | 35.3 ± 1.04 μM (male) 28.9 ± 6.8 μM (female) | GS subjects show higher expression level of p-AMPK, PPARα and γ and PGC1α in PMBCs in comparison to age- and gender –matched control subjects. They are less likely to contract metabolic diseases or die prematurely | |
| PPARα knockout | Bilirubin (30 mg/kg) directly binds to activate PPARα and limits lipid deposition in adipose cells | ||
| C57 male mice | HMOX1 induction by CoPPIX (5 mg/100 gr subcutaneous) or HMOX1 endothelial overexpression by gene therapy in HFD mice reduce inflammation markers, down-regulate PPARγ and reduce adipocytes size | ||
| GS subjects | 29.2 ± 11.6 μM | Mild hyperbilirubinemia contribute to reduce oxidative stress and vascular complications in atherosclerotic patients with GS | |
| GS subjects | 32.6 ±13.5 μM | Mild hyperbilirubinemia protects GS subjects from ischemic heart disease | |
| Male atherosclerotic patients | // | Meta-analysis of 11 published studies proves the inverse relationship between serum bilirubin levels and atherosclerosis | |
| Early familial CAD patients | 8.9 ± 6.1 μM(CAD) 12.4 ± 8.1 μM(ctr) | CAD risk is negatively correlated with bilirubin concentration | |
| Ldlr–/– mice | 1.7 mg/dl | Intraperitoneal injection of bilirubin reduces VCAM and ICAM signaling in endothelial cells preventing plaque formation | |
| Patients with carotid atherosclerotic plaques | 13.6 ± 3 μM | Serum concentration of bilirubin (total, direct and indirect) is correlated with the reduction of lipoperoxides in the lesions | |
| GS subjects | 23 ± 5 μM | Increased levels of circulating bilirubin inhibits platelet aggregation and granule release | |
| MS patients | <13.97 μM | Patients with long duration MS show low levels of bilirubin plasma concentration | |
| SLE patients | 7.1 ± 5.3 μM | Low serum bilirubin represented a strong predictor of the manifestation of SLE symptoms Subjects with higher serum bilirubin levels, such as those with Gilbert’s syndrome, might be protected from the development of SLE. | |
| RA patients | >11 μM | Higher serum total bilirubin level is negatively associated with RA | |
| Crohn’s patients | >23 μM | GS confers a protective effect on the development of Crohn’s disease | |
| SJL/J mice and Lewis rats | Not evaluated | Bilirubin treatment (2 × 100 mg/kg per day i.p.) successfully prevented the development of chronic EAE. Treatment with ZnPP exacerbates acute EAE | |
| C57BL6/J mice | Not evaluated | Bilirubin (30 mg/kg i.p.) suppresses colonic inflammation, induced by the oral administration of DSS, by preventing leukocytes infiltration | |
| C57BL/6J | Not evaluated | Bilirubin treatment (30 mg/kg i.p.) blocks the influx of leukocytes into the lungs of mice with OVA-induced asthma | |
| C57BL/6J | 0.55 ±0.04 mg/dl (after 1 h i.p.) | Bilirubin treatment (5 mg/kg i.p.) enhance blood flow recovery in response to ischemia by promoting angiogenesis through endothelial cells activation via Akt-eNOS-dependent manner | |
| HMOX1–/– mice | Not evaluated | HMOX1null mice show less capability of wound healing compared to WT mice due to a reduced endothelial migration and neovascularization | |
| HMOX1–/– mice | Not evaluated | Gene therapy by using pHRE-HO-1 vector protects against oxidative stress, improves angiogenesis and favors tissue regeneration | |
| Wistar rats | Not evaluated | Administration of Bilirubin (i.p. 30 mg/kg) favors cutaneous wound healing by a pro-healing modulation of pro-inflammatory/anti-inflammatory cytokines, adhesion molecule and favoring angiogenesis | |
| STZ Wistar rats | Not applicable | Bilirubin treatment (0.3% ointment) accelerates the timely progression of wound healing by modulating expression of cytokines and growth factors (HIF-1α, VEGF, TGF-β1, SDF-1α, TNFα, IL-1β, IL-10 and MMP-9) promotes angiogenesis, reduces inflammation and improves maturation of wound | |
| STZ Wistar rats | Not applicable | Bilirubin treatment (0.3% ointment) markedly improved the antioxidant profile of the diabetic wound and accelerates cutaneous wound healing | |
| FVB pregnant mice | Not evaluated | Pharmacological inhibition of HMOX1 (induced by SnPP 30 μmoli/kg i.v.) is associated with pathogenesis of pregnancy complications and preeclampsia | |
| Cancer patients | >17 μM | UGT1A1 gene polymorfism is positively correlate with overall survival in cancer patients | |
| GI and CRC patients | 0.52 ±0.017 mg/dl | Increase in serum bilirubin level is associated with a markedly decreased prevalence of CRC | |
| CRC patients | 9.8 μM | Patients with CRC have lower serum bilirubin levels: 1 μmol/L decrease in serum bilirubin is associated with a 7% increase in CRC risk. UGT1A1∗28 allele carrier status is associated with a 20% decrease in risk of CRC | |
| GS subjects | 32 ± 13.6 μM | Older subjects with GS show decreased DNA damage in epithelial tissue. No correlation have been found with DNA damage in lymphocytes | |
| BALB/c nude mice | 35–40 μM | Treatment with bilirubin (25 mg/kg i.p.) reduces colon cancer growth via activation of ERK1/2 | |
| BALB/c-nude mice | Not evaluated | Fasting-mimicking diet (FMD) or short-term starvation (STS) reduces HMOX1 expression in cancer and sensitizes cancer cells to chemotherapy | |
| 12-month-old Gunn rats | 75 ±18 μM | Mildly elevated levels of bilirubin improve anthropometric and metabolic parameters in hyperbilirubinemic old rats respect to normobilirubinemic | |
| GS subjects | 33.12 ±9.86 μM | GS subjects have on average longer telomeres compared to age- and gender-matched control | |
| C57BL/6 mice | Not evaluated | Hemin-induced HMOX1 upregulation, through the generation of both CO and bilirubin, limits cardiomyocytes senescence |
Bilirubin affects vascular cell functions: In vitro studies.
| Experimental model | Bilirubin concentration (mg/dl) or μM in cell culture media | Main findings | References |
| HUVECs | 10–20 μM bilirubin | Bilirubin inhibits migration of THP-1 monocytes across activated HUVEC monolayers | |
| HUVECs | 20 μM | Bilirubin markedly inhibited the migration of Jurkat cells across TNFα-stimulated HUVEC monolayers by impairing VCAM1 signaling | |
| HUVECs | Not evaluated | HMOX1 induction (10 μM CoPPIX) prevents high glucose-induced reduction in NO release and enhanced VEGF-A expression | |
| HUVECs | 50 μM | Bilirubin promoted proliferation of endothelial cells and also affects invasion capability of cells from trophoblast | |
| HUVECs and VSMCs | Not evaluated | PPAR ligands induce HMOX1 and block the inflammatory response in vascular cells | |
| HUVECs, HAECs, HDMECs | 10 μM | HIV protease inhibitors (PIs) induce HMOX1 that, by generating bilirubin, counteract the anti-proliferative and inflammatory actions of PIs | |
| ECV304 | Not evaluated | Statins increase HMOX1 expression | |
| HMEC-1 | Not evaluated | Cell transfection with plasmid vector (pHRE-HO-1) carrying human HMOX1 driven by three hypoxia response elements (HREs) and cultured in 0.5% oxygen, by up-regulating HMOX1, effectively protects against oxidative stress and promotes angiogenesis | |
| HBMECs | 50 or 100 μM UCB in presence of HSA | Short-term exposure to UCB activates endothelial cells and late-term exposure to UCB increases paracellular permeability, overall increasing endothelial damage | |
| HAECs | 1–10 μM | Bilirubin increases AKT dependent eNOS phosphorylation and favors leukocyte adhesion migration and tube formation | |
| HCAECs | 1, 5, and 10 μM bilirubin | Niacin increases HMOX1 expression and inhibits TNFα induced endothelial inflammation | |
| HGEnCs | 10 μM | HMOX1 induction (25 μM CoPPIX) as well as bilirubin supplementation directly reduce ET-1 generation | |
| cEPCs | 10–20 mg/dl | Progenitor endothelial cells induced to proliferate when exposed to 5 mg/dl bilirubin; higher concentrations (up to 20 mg/dl) induce cell death | |
| EA.hy926 | 0.5–100 μM | Exogenous bilirubin increases endothelial antioxidant activity as well as HMOX1-dependent bilirubin generation | |
| Commercially EC | Not evaluated | EC-transfected with HMOX1 release substances that increase healthy adipocytes | |
| HUVECs and H5V cells | 0.015 μM < Bf < 0.030 μM | UCB, at clinically relevant concentrations, limits over-expression of adhesion molecules and inhibits PMN-endothelial adhesion induced by pro-inflammatory cytokine TNFα, even though UCB itself does not alter expression of these adhesion molecules. Inhibition NF-kappaB transduction pathway | |
| HAECs and mAECs | Not evaluated | In HAECs and in primary mAECs from HMOX1+/+ and HMOX1–/–, SDF-1 (100-200 ng/ml) favors angiogenesis through the induction of HMOX1 | |
| mHEVa and mHEVc | 10–20 μM | Bilirubin inhibits leukocyte transmigration across endothelial cell monolayer | |
| CMVECs | 1 μM | Bilirubin supplementation prevent endothelial apoptosis induced by TNFα by reducing NOX4-derived ROS | |
| bEnd.3 and MS1 | 1–40 μM | Endothelial cells derived from BBB are more sensitive to UCB pro-apoptotic effect than endothelial cells from pancreas | |
| mAECs | Not evaluated | Primary endothelial cells from HMOX2–/– mice show an increased oxidative stress, inflammation and excessive angiogenesis | |
| BAEC | 1 μM | Bilirubin supplementation restores cell protection against acute high glucose treatment in endothelial cells exposed to HMOX1 inhibitor, preventing HNE production | |
| Bovine vascular smooth-muscle cells | 0.5–5 μM | Short term treatment with bilirubin as well as HMOX1 induction (25–200 μM hemin) protect against oxidant-mediated damage | |
| H9c2 | 0.5 μM | Bilirubin treatment as well asHMOX1 induction (5 μM hemin) protects against hypoxia/reoxygenation | |
| Primary mice cardiomyocytes | 20 μM | HMOX1 induction (10 μM hemin) as well as bilirubin supplementation limits senescence |