1. Nitidine chloride induces cardiac hypertrophy in mice by targeting autophagy-related 4B cysteine peptidase
- Author
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Yang Hong, Wan-qing Xu, Jing Feng, Han Lou, Heng Liu, Lei Wang, Hao Cui, Lin-tong Jiang, Ran-chen Xu, Heng-hui Xu, Min-zhen Xie, Yang Li, Philipp Kopylov, Qi Wang, and Yong Zhang
- Subjects
Pharmacology ,Pharmacology (medical) ,General Medicine - Abstract
Nitidine chloride (NC) is a standard active component from the traditional Chinese medicine Zanthoxylum nitidum (Roxb.) DC. (ZN). NC has shown a variety of pharmacological activities including anti-tumor activity. As a number of anti-tumor drugs cause cardiotoxicity, herein we investigated whether NC exerted a cardiotoxic effect and the underlying mechanism. Aqueous extract of ZN (ZNE) was intraperitoneally injected into rats, while NC was injected into beagles and mice once daily for 4 weeks. Cardiac function was assessed using echocardiography. We showed that both ZNE administered in rats and NC administered in mice induced dose-dependent cardiac hypertrophy and dysfunction, whereas administration of NC at the middle and high dose caused death in Beagles. Consistently, we observed a reduction of cardiac autophagy levels in NC-treated mice and neonatal mouse cardiomyocytes. Furthermore, we demonstrated that autophagy-related 4B cysteine peptidase (ATG4B) may be a potential target of NC, since overexpression of ATG4B reversed the cardiac hypertrophy and reduced autophagy levels observed in NC-treated mice. We conclude that NC induces cardiac hypertrophy via ATG4B-mediated downregulation of autophagy in mice. Thus, this study provides guidance for the safe clinical application of ZN and the use of NC as an anti-tumor drug.
- Published
- 2022