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PGC1α activation by pterostilbene ameliorates acute doxorubicin cardiotoxicity by reducing oxidative stress via enhancing AMPK and SIRT1 cascades
Author(s) -
Dong Liu,
Zhiqiang Ma,
Liqun Xu,
Xiaoyan Zhang,
Shubin Qiao,
Jiansong Yuan
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
aging
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.473
H-Index - 90
ISSN - 1945-4589
DOI - 10.18632/aging.102418
Subject(s) - pterostilbene , cardiotoxicity , ampk , pharmacology , oxidative stress , resveratrol , downregulation and upregulation , in vivo , cardioprotection , doxorubicin , chemistry , oxidative phosphorylation , medicine , biochemistry , protein kinase a , ischemia , toxicity , biology , enzyme , chemotherapy , microbiology and biotechnology , organic chemistry , gene
Doxorubicin (DOX) is a widely used and potent anticancer agent, but DOX dose-dependently induced cardiotoxicity greatly limits its use in clinic. Pterostilbene, a natural analog of resveratrol, is a known antioxidant and exerts myocardial protection. The present study explored the action and detailed mechanism of pterostilbene on DOX-treated cardiomyocytes. We investigated the effects of pterostilbene on established acute DOX-induced cardiotoxicity models in both H9c2 cells treated with 1 μM DOX and C57BL/6 mice with DOX (20 mg/kg cumulative dose) exposure. Pterostilbene markedly alleviated the DOX exposure-induced acute myocardial injury. Both in vitro and in vivo studies revealed that pterostilbene inhibited the acute DOX exposure-caused oxidative stress and mitochondrial morphological disorder via the PGC1α upregulation through activating AMPK and via PGC1α deacetylation through enhancing SIRT1. However, these effects were partially reversed by knockdown of AMPK or SIRT1 in vitro and treatment of Compound C (AMPK inhibitor) or EX527 (SIRT1 inhibitor) in vivo . Our results indicate that pterostilbene protects cardiomyocytes from acute DOX exposure-induced oxidative stress and mitochondrial damage via PGC1α upregulation and deacetylation through activating AMPK and SIRT1 cascades.

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