| Literature DB >> 33707963 |
Chien-Chung Yang1,2, Chuen-Mao Yang3,4,5.
Abstract
Several pro-inflammatory factors and proteins have been characterized that are involved in the pathogenesis of inflammatory diseases, including acute respiratory distress syndrome, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and asthma, induced by oxidative stress, cytokines, bacterial toxins, and viruses. Reactive oxygen species (ROS) act as secondary messengers and are products of normal cellular metabolism. Under physiological conditions, ROS protect cells against oxidative stress through the maintenance of cellular redox homeostasis, which is important for proliferation, viability, cell activation, and organ function. However, overproduction of ROS is most frequently due to excessive stimulation of either the mitochondrial electron transport chain and xanthine oxidase or reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) by pro-inflammatory cytokines, such as interleukin-1β and tumor necrosis factor α. NADPH oxidase activation and ROS overproduction could further induce numerous inflammatory target proteins that are potentially mediated via Nox/ROS-related transcription factors triggered by various intracellular signaling pathways. Thus, oxidative stress is considered important in pulmonary inflammatory processes. Previous studies have demonstrated that redox signals can induce pulmonary inflammatory diseases. Thus, therapeutic strategies directly targeting oxidative stress may be effective for pulmonary inflammatory diseases. Therefore, drugs with anti-inflammatory and anti-oxidative properties may be beneficial to these diseases. Recent studies have suggested that traditional Chinese medicines, statins, and peroxisome proliferation-activated receptor agonists could modulate inflammation-related signaling processes and may be beneficial for pulmonary inflammatory diseases. In particular, several herbal medicines have attracted attention for the management of pulmonary inflammatory diseases. Therefore, we reviewed the pharmacological effects of these drugs to dissect how they induce host defense mechanisms against oxidative injury to combat pulmonary inflammation. Moreover, the cytotoxicity of oxidative stress and apoptotic cell death can be protected via the induction of HO-1 by these drugs. The main objective of this review is to focus on Chinese herbs and old drugs to develop anti-inflammatory drugs able to induce HO-1 expression for the management of pulmonary inflammatory diseases.Entities:
Keywords: HO-1; Nrf2; ROS; inflammatory mediators; pulmonary alveolar epithelial cells; tracheal smooth muscle cells
Year: 2021 PMID: 33707963 PMCID: PMC7940992 DOI: 10.2147/JIR.S293135
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Inflamm Res ISSN: 1178-7031
Figure 1The roles of ROS, pro-inflammatory mediators, and transcription factors AP-1 and NF-κB in pulmonary inflammatory diseases. Pathogen-activated molecular patterns (PAMPs), including endotoxins (LPS or LTA), growth factors (EGF or PDGF), and cytokines (IL-1β or TNF-α), activate downstream pathways (p38 MAPK, JNK1/2, and ERK1/2) via their respective receptors (TLR, EGFR, DPGFR, IL-1R, and TNFR) to promote transcription factors NF-κB and AP-1 activities also activated by ROS, leading to genes transcription (including cytokines, chemokines, MMP-9, COX-2, iNOS, ICAM-1, VCAM-1, MUC5AC, and MUC5B) and pulmonary inflammation.
Figure 2The functions of PPARs agonists in pulmonary inflammation. PPARs agonists and PPARs agonist-induced HO-1 upregulation can inhibit NF-κB activity via blocking IKK activity and IκB phosphorylation, leading to suppression of NF-κB nuclear translocation and DNA binding activity and in turn reduction of gene expression including MCP-1, iNOS, VCAM-1, ICAM-1, P-selectin, IL-1, IL-6, TNF-α, COX-2, and RANTEs.
Figure 3The anti-inflammatory, anti-fibrotic, and anti-apoptotic mechanisms of Chinese herbs in the lungs. Herbs can target individual signal molecules including ROS, MAPKs, and NF-κB as well as pro-inflammatory mediators to block the expression of pro-inflammatory proteins, pro-fibrotic proteins, and pro-apoptotic proteins.
The Effects of Herbal Compounds in Pulmonary Inflammation
| Compound | Action | references |
|---|---|---|
| Salvianolic acid A/B | ↑Nrf2 translocation, ↑HO-1, ↓pulmonary vascular remodeling via inhibiting EndMT | [ |
| ↓pulmonary fibrosis, ↓cyclin D1, ↓cyclin E1, ↓cyclin B1, ↓Bcl-2 protein, ↑p53, ↑p21, ↑cleaved caspase-3 protein | [ | |
| repress the adhesion of bacteria | [ | |
| ↑SOD, ↑catalase, ↑glutathione peroxidase | [ | |
| ↓MAPK and NF-κB signaling pathways | [ | |
| ↓TNF-α, ↓IL-6, ↓IL-1β, ↓MCP-1 | [ | |
| Asiatic acid | ↓pulmonary fibrosis | [ |
| ↓TGF-β1, ↓Collagen I, ↓Collagen III, ↓α-SMA, ↓TIMP-1, ↓NLRP3 inflammasome, ↓Smads and ERK1/2 | [ | |
| ↓ROS, ↓neutrophil elastase (NE) activity, ↓MCP-1, ↓recruitment of inflammatory cells, ↓MAPKs, ↓NF-kB, ↑Nrf2, ↑HO-1, ↑SOD3, ↑catalase | [ | |
| Celastrol | ↓NF-κB signaling pathway, ↓NLRP3 activity | [ |
| ↓IL-8, ↓TNFα, ↓MCP -1, ↑SOD, ↑catalase, ↓Ednrb/Kng1 signaling pathway | [ | |
| ↓MMP 2/9, ↑Nrf2, ↑HO-1, ↑GSTs, ↑NQO1 | [ | |
| ↓Bax, ↓caspase-3 | [ | |
| Fisetin | ↓TNFα, ↓PARP-1 | [ |
| ↓neutrophils and macrophage infiltration, ↓MPO activity, ↓TLR4 expression, ↓NF-κB | [ | |
| ↑Nrf2, ↑HO-1, ↑glutathione peroxidase‐2, ↑reduced glutathione, ↑SOD | [ | |
| Galangin | ↓TGF-β1-ROS-MAPK pathway, ↓goblet cell hyperplasia, ↓collagen deposition, ↓α-SMA expression, ↓VEGF, ↓MMP-9 | [ |
| ↓IL-4, 5, 13, 17, ↓TNF-α, ↓NO, ↓ROS, ↓EPO, ↓IgE, ↑IFN-γ, ↑PPARγ activity | [ | |
| Kaempferol | ↓TAK1, ↓NF-κB, ↓MAPK, ↓cytokine production | [ |
| ↓ROS | [ | |
| ↓Cyclooxygenase-2 | [ | |
| Luteolin | ↓NF-κB signaling pathway, ↓miR-132 | [ |
| ↓TGF-β1, ↓α-SMA, ↓type I collagen, ↓vimentin, ↓neutrophil infiltration, ↓ TNF-R, ↓IL-6, ↓lung fibrosis | [ | |
| ↓MPO, ↓inflammatory cytokines, ↓MDA, ↑SOD, ↑glutathione, ↓NF-κB activation, ↑AKT/Nrf2 pathway | [ | |
| Madecassoside | ↓pulmonary fibrosis, ↓oxidative stress | [ |
| Oleanolic acid | ↓GATA-3 and RORγt pathways | [ |
| ↓ROS, ↑reduced glutathione/oxidized glutathione ratio, ↑catalase, ↓TNF-α, ↓macrophage migration inhibitory factor, ↓IL-6, ↓interferon-γ, ↓TGF-β | [ | |
| ↓iNOS, ↑SOD | [ | |
| ↓NF-κB | [ | |
| ↓cytokines, ↓NLRP3 inflammasome | [ | |
| ↑SIRT1 | [ | |
| Saikosaponin A | ↓cell infiltration, ↓NO, ↓TNF-α, ↓IL-1β, ↓MPO, ↓MDA, ↓NF-ΚB, ↑Nrf2 and HO-1 | [ |
| CDDO-Me | ↓NO, ↓TNF-α, ↓IL-1β, ↓IL-6, ↓NF-κB, ↓Akt, ↓MAPK pathways | [ |
| ↑Nrf2 activity | [ | |
| ↓TGFβ, and ↓α-SMA, ↓fibronectin, ↓fibrosis | [ | |
| Pristimerin | ↓TNF-α, ↓IL-6, ↓Bax, ↓caspase-3,↑Bcl2 | [ |
Abbreviations: NE, neutrophil elastase; TGF-β1, transforming growth factor‑β1; αSMA, α‑smooth muscle actin; SOD, superoxide dismutase; MDA, Malondialdehyde; MPO, myeloperoxidase; RORγt, retinoic acid receptor-related orphan receptor gamma-t; iNOS, inducible nitric oxide synthase; ˝↓̏, decrease; ˝↑̏, increase.