| Literature DB >> 34650663 |
Yueming Ding1, Yiming Zhang1, Wunong Zhang2, Jia Shang3, Zhenxing Xie4, Chaoran Chen1.
Abstract
Ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) injury often occurred in some pathologies and surgeries. I/R injury not only harmed to physiological functions of corresponding organ and tissue but also induced multiple tissue or organ dysfunctions (even these in distant locations). Although the reperfusion of blood attenuated I/R injury to a certain degree, the risk of secondary damages was difficult to be controlled and it even caused failures of these tissues and organs. Lipoic acid (LA), as an endogenous active substance and a functional agent in food, owns better safety and effects in our body (e.g., enhancing antioxidant activity, improving cognition and dementia, controlling weight, and preventing multiple sclerosis, diabetes complication, and cancer). The literature searching was conducted in PubMed, Embase, Cochrane Library, Web of Science, and SCOPUS from inception to 20 May 2021. It had showed that endogenous LA was exhausted in the process of I/R, which further aggravated I/R injury. Thus, supplements with LA timely (especially pretreatments) may be the prospective way to prevent I/R injury. Recently, studies had demonstrated that LA supplements significantly attenuated I/R injuries of many organs, though clinic investigations were short at present. Hence, it was urgent to summarize these progresses about the effects of LA on different I/R organs as well as the potential mechanisms, which would enlighten further investigations and prepare for clinic applications in the future.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34650663 PMCID: PMC8510805 DOI: 10.1155/2021/5093216
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oxid Med Cell Longev ISSN: 1942-0994 Impact factor: 6.543
Figure 1The biological functions of LA and potential mechanisms. Akt: protein kinase B; LA: lipoic acid; p38 MAPK: mitogen-activated protein kinase p38; Nrf2: nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2; PKC: protein kinase C.
The effects of LA on myocardial I/R injury.
| Species | I/R models | Treatments | Effects and mechanisms | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wistar rats | Left coronary artery I/R (15 min/30 min) | LA (10−7 M) from 15 min before ischemia to the end of reperfusion | Protecting cardiac I/R arrhythmias via its antioxidation and the activation of potassium ATP-sensitive channels | [ |
| Sprague-Dawley rats | Isolated cardiac I/R (60 min/30 min) | LA (1, 5, 10∗10−8 M) for 10 min before ischemia | Reducing cardiac dysfunction and apoptosis via restoring PKC | [ |
| Sprague-Dawley rats | Isolated cardiac I/R (30 min/30 min) | LA (0.5 | Improving cardiac hemodynamic function and damage via inhibiting mitochondrial O·2- formation (by DHLA) | [ |
| Wistar rats | Isolated cardiac I/R (30 min/30 min) | LA (50 mg/kg∗day, i.p for 7 d) before surgery | Increasing coronary flow via scavenging free radicals | [ |
| Rat H9c2 cardiomyocytes | Hypoxia/reoxygenation (4 h/3 h) | LA (300 | Protecting H/R injuries of cardiomyocytes by inhibiting autophagy | [ |
| Sprague-Dawley rats | Left anterior descending coronary artery I/R (30 min/3 h) | LA (5, 10, 15, 25, or 50 mg/kg) via tail vein injection before I/R | Attenuating cardiomyocyte necrosis, apoptosis, and inflammation via activating PI3K/Akt/Nrf2 nuclear translocation/HO-1 | [ |
| Wistar rats | Hypoxia/reoxygenation (45 min/60 min) in isolated hearts | LA (0.3 mM) in the hypoxic period, at 15 min before reoxygenation | Accelerating the recovery of the aortic flow via increasing ATP synthesis and phosphocreatine contents | [ |
| Wistar diabetic rats | Global no-flow I/R (30 min/30 min) in isolated hearts | LA (100 mg/kg i.p., 5 times/w, for 8 w) before perfusion | Reducing serious reperfusion dysrhythmias | [ |
| Sprague-Dawley rats | Aortic cannula I/R (40 min/20 min) | LA (1.65 g/kg∗d) pretreatment for 6 weeks | Decreasing lipid peroxidation products and the loss of alpha-tocopherol | [ |
The effects of LA on renal I/R injury.
| Species | I/R models | Treatments | Effects and mechanisms | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Albino rats | Both renal I/R (1 h/2 h) | LA (100 mg/kg, i.p) at 2 days before I/R | Attenuating histopathological injury via reducing oxidative damage | [ |
| Wistar albino rats | Right nephrectomy and left renal I/R (45 min/24 h) | LA (100 mg/kg, i.p) or saline twice, at 30 min before ischemia | Inhibiting neutrophil infiltration and inflammation generation, balancing the oxidant-antioxidant status | [ |
| Sprague-Dawley rats | Bilateral renal I/R (45 min/24 h) | Pretreatment with LA (50 mg/kg i.p) for 2 weeks | Decreasing levels of creatinine and urea together with oxidative stress and inflammation; elevating GSH levels and activities of antioxidant enzymes | [ |
| Albino Wistar rats | Right nephrectomy and the left renal I/R (1 h/24 h) | LA (100 mg/kg, i.p) 30 min before I/R | Reducing degradation of extracellular matrix and oxidative stress via increasing matrix metalloproteinases-2 and -9 activities and decreasing metalloproteinases-1 and -2 levels | [ |
| Sprague-Dawley rats | Bilateral renal I/R (40 min/2 d) | LA (80 mg/kg i.p) at 48 and 24 h before ischemia and at 6 and 24 h after reperfusion | Protecting renal function (e.g., aquaporins and sodium transporters) via normalizing activities of local arginine vasopressin/cAMP, nitric oxide/cGMP, and ET systems | [ |
| Sprague-Dawley rats | Right nephrectomy and left renal I/R (45 min/24 h) | LA (10 or 100 mg/kg, i.p) at 24 and 1 h before ischemia | Attenuating the deterioration of renal function; repressing tubular necrosis, proteinaceous casts in tubuli, and medullary congestion through suppressing ET-1 | [ |
The effects of LA on hepatic I/R injury.
| Subjects | I/R | Treatments | Effects and mechanisms | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Human | Hepatic I/R (2 h/2 h); blood samples (before; 1, 2, 3, 7, and 30 d after liver transplantation) | LA (600 mg) to the donor portal vein before ischemia and another LA (600 mg) at 15 min before reperfusion | Protecting against oxidative stress and reducing the appearance of postreperfusion syndrome | [ |
| Human | Hepatic I/R (45 min /60 min) in resection | LA (600 mg, i.v) at 15 min before transection | Reducing I/R injury via attenuating apoptosis | [ |
| Wistar albino rats | Hepatic I/R (45 min/60 min) | LA (100 mg/kg, i.p.) before ischemia and immediately before reperfusion period | Alleviating the I/R-induced liver injury in the hepatic structure and function via antioxidant properties | [ |
| Wistar rats | Hepatic I/R (60 min/(1, 3, 6, and 12 h) | Injection with LA (25 mg) into the caudal vein at 15 min before reperfusion and 60 min after ischemia | Scavenging oxygen and nitrogen free radicals, increasing GSH levels, reducing inflammatory reaction mediated by NF- | [ |
| Sprague-Dawley rats | Hepatic I/R (60 min/45,90 min) | LA (10 or 50 | Attenuating I/R injury via activating the PI3-kinase/Akt pathway | [ |
| Brown Norway rats | Hepatic selective lobe I/R (10 min/10 min), then sustained I/R (90 min/4 h) | LA (500 | Improving tolerance to ischemia via downregulating proapoptotic gene | [ |
| Brown Norway rats | Hepatic I/R (90 min/1 h) | LA (120 mg) via the inferior vena cava at 15 min in advance | Attenuation of I/R by reducing necrosis and apoptosis | [ |
| Brown Norway rats | Hepatic I/R (90 min/1 and 4 h) | LA (1.5 ml, 5,000 mol, i.v) at 15 min prior to ischemia | Attenuating I/R via reducing cell deaths from necrosis and apoptosis | [ |
The effects of LA on cerebral I/R injury.
| Subjects | I/R | Treatments | Effects and mechanisms | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sprague-Dawley rats | Left external carotid artery permanently occluded and left internal carotid artery I/R (90 min/24 h) | LA (50, 70, and 100 mg/kg, i.h) at 2 h before I/R | Attenuating I/R injury via reducing oxidative stress and caspase-dependent apoptosis | [ |
| Sprague-Dawley rats | Middle cerebral artery selective I/R (30 s/30 s) before sustained I/R (2 h/24 h) | LA (50 mg/kg i.p) for 30 min before I/R | Exhibiting neuroprotection by attenuating neuroinflammation via inhibiting the TLR4/MyD88/NF- | [ |
| Sprague-Dawley rats | Left middle cerebral artery I/R (2 h/1, 3, 7, 14, 21, 28, 35, 42, 49, and 56 d) | LA injection (20 mg/kg) via the left external jugular vein immediately after I/R | Exhibiting neurorestorative effects via insulin receptor activation, anti-inflammatory and antioxidant actions | [ |
| Sprague-Dawley rats | Ligating external carotid arteries and the internal carotid artery I/R (2 h/24 h) | LA (10, 20,40, and 80 mg/kg) via the left external jugular vein after reperfusion | Promoting functional recovery via attenuating oxidative damage mediated by the Nrf2/HO-1 pathway | [ |
| Sprague-Dawley rats | Right middle cerebral artery I/R (30 min/5.5 h) | LA (0.05, 0.5, 5.0, or 50 mg/kg, i.v) at 30 min | LA as a neuroprotectant via increasing protein expression of superoxide dismutase 2 | [ |
| Sprague-Dawley rats | Permanent distal middle cerebral artery occlusion-bilateral common carotid artery I/R (30 min/48 h) | LA (40 mg/kg, i.p) at 30 min after ischemia | Protective effects by LA via reducing phosphate mTOR | [ |
| Albino rats | Bilateral femoral arteries I/R (3 h/1d) | LA (100 mg/kg, i.p) for 7 d after I/R | Ameliorating neuronal damages, maintaining the normal structure, surface area, and the number of light neurons in the pyramidal layer | [ |
| Mouse primary brain endothelial cell and bEnd.3 cell | Oxygen glucose deprivation/reperfusion (6 h/4 h) | LA (1 mM) pre- and posttreatment for ischemia | Protecting against oxygen glucose deprivation/reperfusion injury via promoting the Akt/mTOR pathway | [ |
| Sprague-Dawley rats | Bilateral carotid artery I/R (30 min/24 h) | LA (25 mg/kg, i.v) pretreatments | Improving survival and protecting the rat brain | [ |
| Gerbils | Forebrain I/R (5 min/5 d) | LA (20 mg/kg∗d, i.p) for 7 d | Improving locomotor abilities and damages of the CA1 hippocampal pyramidal cells via antioxidant actions | [ |
| C57blk mice | Internal carotid artery I/R (45 min/24 h) | LA (100 mg/kg, i.h)at 1.5 h before ischemia | Reducing stroke infarct volume via antioxidant actions | [ |
The effects of LA on spinal I/R injury.
| Species | I/R models | Treatments | Effects and mechanisms | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| New Zealand rabbits | Abdominal aorta I/R (30 min/48 h) | LA (100 mg/kg, i.p) at 5 min before I/R | Decreasing spinal I/R injury via reducing plasma and spinal levels of nitric oxide, glutathione, malondialdehyde, and advanced oxidation protein products | [ |
| New Zealand rabbits | Abdominal aorta I/R (30 min/48 h) | LA (100 mg/kg, i.p) at 20 min before ischemia | Decreasing neuronal degeneration, axonal damage, and microglial and astrocytic infiltration via oxidative stress | [ |
| Wistar rats | Abdominal aorta I/R (30 min/3 d) | LA (100 mg/kg, i.h) at 3 days before ischemia | Reducing neurologic injury by maintaining the oxidant/antioxidant balance | [ |
| New Zealand rabbits | Abdominal aorta I/R (20 min/2 h) | LA (100 mg/kg) at 10 min before ischemia | Exhibiting antioxidant efficacy with no effect on oxidative stress | [ |
Figure 2The mechanism of LA attenuating I/R injuries in the brain, spine, heart, liver, kidney, intestine, gonad, retina, and limb. Akt: protein kinase B; ALDH2: aldehyde dehydrogenase 2; CNTF: ciliary neurotrophic factor; ET: endothelin; GDNF: glial-derived neurotrophic factor; GFAP: reducing levels of glial fibrillary acidic protein; HO-1: heme oxygenase-1; LA: lipoic acid; MIP-2: macrophage inflammatory protein-2; mTOR: mammalian target of rapamycin; MyD88: myeloid differentiation primary response 88; Nrf2: nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2; PI3K: phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase; PKC: protein kinase C; TLR4: Toll-like receptor 4.