| Literature DB >> 34271418 |
Fereshteh Asgharzadeh1, Farnaz Barneh2, Maryam Fakhraie1, Seyede Leili Adel Barkhordar3, Mohammad Shabani4, Atena Soleimani5, Farzad Rahmani6, Fatemeh Ariakia4, Saeedeh Mehraban7, Amir Avan8, Milad Hashemzehi9, Mohammad-Hassan Arjmand10, Reyhaneh Behnam-Rassouli5, Najmeh Jaberi5, Sayyed-Hadi Sayyed-Hosseinian11, Gordon A Ferns12, Mikhail Ryzhikov13, Mohieddin Jafari14, Majid Khazaei15, Seyed Mahdi Hassanian16.
Abstract
Circulating inflammatory factor inorganic polyphosphate (polyP) released from activated platelets could enhance factor XII and bradykinin resulted in increased capillary leakage and vascular permeability. PolyP induce inflammatory responses through mTOR pathway in endothelial cells, which is being reported in several diseases including atherosclerosis, thrombosis, sepsis, and cancer. Systems and molecular biology approaches were used to explore the regulatory role of the AMPK activator, metformin, on polyP-induced hyper-permeability in different organs in three different models of polyP-induced hyper-permeability including local, systemic short- and systemic long-term approaches in murine models. Our results showed that polyP disrupts endothelial barrier integrity in skin, liver, kidney, brain, heart, and lung in all three study models and metformin abrogates the disruptive effect of polyP. We also showed that activation of AMPK signaling pathway, regulation of oxidant/anti-oxidant balance, as well as decrease in inflammatory cell infiltration constitute a set of molecular mechanisms through which metformin elicits it's protective responses against polyP-induced hyper-permeability. These results support the clinical values of AMPK activators including the FDA-approved metformin in attenuating vascular damage in polyP-associated inflammatory diseases.Entities:
Keywords: AMPK signaling; Inorganic polyphosphate; Metformin; Vascular permeability
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34271418 DOI: 10.1016/j.intimp.2021.107937
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Immunopharmacol ISSN: 1567-5769 Impact factor: 4.932