Litcius/Paper detail

Vanillin prevents the growth of endometriotic lesions through anti-inflammatory and antioxidant pathways in a mouse model

Yingnan Liu, Jinwen Kang, Yu Zhang, Shanshan Song, Qixin Xu, Han Zhang, Lei Lü, Shu‐Wen Wei, Liang Chen, Ren‐Wei Su

2023Food & Function18 citationsDOI

Abstract

was reduced, the number of macrophages and neutrophils was decreased, and the NF-κB signaling pathway was inhibited, indicating that vanillin suppressed the inflammatory response in the ectopic endometrium. Besides, we found that the intensity of tissue reactive oxygen species (ROS) was significantly lower, and mitochondrial complex IV expression was reduced in the vanillin-treated group. Meanwhile, treatment of the immortalized human endometriotic epithelial cell line (11Z) with vanillin resulted in the downregulation of cyclin genes that drive the cell proliferation process, inhibited cell proliferation, promoted apoptosis, and downregulated the expression of LPS-induced inflammatory cytokines. Most importantly, our data showed that the vanillin treatment had only minimal effects on the eutopic endometrium with respect to the pregnancy process, indicating its safety to be used in treating endometriosis in adults. In conclusion, our data suggest that vanillin has potential therapeutic properties for endometriosis as a regulatory molecule of cell proliferation, apoptosis, inflammation, and oxidative stress.

Topics & Concepts

ApoptosisInflammationEndometriosisCell growthOxidative stressChemistryVanillinPharmacologyAntioxidantCancer researchEndocrinologyInternal medicineMedicineBiochemistryEndometriosis Research and TreatmentReproductive System and Pregnancy