Litcius/Paper detail

Liensinine attenuates inflammation and oxidative stress in spleen tissue in an LPS-induced mouse sepsis model

Hanyu Wang, Yuanhao Yang, Xiao Zhang, Yan Wang, Hui Fan, Jinfeng Shi, Xuelian Tan, Baoshi Xu, Jingchao Qiang, Enzhuang Pan, Mingyi Chu, Zibo Dong, Jingquan Dong

2023Journal of Zhejiang University SCIENCE B16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Sepsis is a complex syndrome caused by multiple pathogens and involves multiple organ failure, particularly spleen dysfunction. In 2017, the worldwide incidence was 48.9 million sepsis cases and 11 million sepsis-related deaths were reported (Rudd et al., 2020). Inflammation, oxidative stress, and apoptosis are the most common pathologies seen in sepsis. Liensinine (LIE) is a bisbenzylisoquinoline-type alkaloid extracted from the seed embryo of Nelumbo nucifera. Lotus seed hearts have high content of LIE which mainly has antihypertensive and antiarrhythmic pharmacological effects. It can exert anti-carcinogenic activity by regulating cell, inflammation, and apoptosis signaling pathways (Manogaran et al., 2019). However, its protective effect from sepsis-induced spleen damage is unknown. In this research, we established a mouse sepsis model induced by lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and investigated the protective effects of LIE on sepsis spleen injury in terms of inflammatory response, oxidative stress, and apoptosis.

Topics & Concepts

SepsisOxidative stressInflammationLipopolysaccharideSpleenPharmacologyApoptosisImmunologyTumor necrosis factor alphaTUNEL assayChemistryBiologyMedicineEndocrinologyBiochemistryPlant-based Medicinal ResearchChromatography in Natural ProductsPharmacological Effects of Natural Compounds