6 research outputs found
2-Hydroxy-3-methylanthraquinone inhibits homologous recombination repair in osteosarcoma through the MYC-CHK1-RAD51 axis
Abstract Background Osteosarcoma is a malignant bone tumor that usually affects adolescents aged 15ā19 y. The DNA damage response (DDR) is significantly enhanced in osteosarcoma, impairing the effect of systemic chemotherapy. Targeting the DDR process was considered a feasible strategy benefitting osteosarcoma patients. However, the clinical application of DDR inhibitors is not impressive because of their side effects. Chinese herbal medicines with high anti-tumor effects and low toxicity in the human body have gradually gained attention. 2-Hydroxy-3-methylanthraquinone (HMA), a Chinese medicine monomer found in the extract of Oldenlandia diffusa, exerts significant inhibitory effects on various tumors. However, its anti-osteosarcoma effects and defined molecular mechanisms have not been reported. Methods After HMA treatment, the proliferation and metastasis capacity of osteosarcoma cells was detected by CCK-8, colony formation, transwell assays and Annexin V-fluorescein isothiocyanate/propidium iodide staining. RNA-sequence, plasmid infection, RNA interference, Western blotting and immunofluorescence assay were used to investigate the molecular mechanism and effects of HMA inhibiting osteosarcoma. Rescue assay and CHIP assay was used to further verified the relationship between MYC, CHK1 and RAD51. Results HMA regulate MYC to inhibit osteosarcoma proliferation and DNA damage repair through PI3K/AKT signaling pathway. The results of RNA-seq, IHC, Western boltting etc. showed relationship between MYC, CHK1 and RAD51. Rescue assay and CHIP assay further verified HMA can impair homologous recombination repair through the MYC-CHK1-RAD51 pathway. Conclusion HMA significantly inhibits osteosarcoma proliferation and homologous recombination repair through the MYC-CHK1-RAD51 pathway, which is mediated by the PI3K-AKT signaling pathway. This study investigated the exact mechanism of the anti-osteosarcoma effect of HMA and provided a potential feasible strategy for the clinical treatment of human osteosarcoma. Graphical Abstrac
PGC1Ī±āInducing Senomorphic Nanotherapeutics Functionalized with NKG2DāOverexpressing Cell Membranes for Intervertebral Disc Degeneration
Abstract Cellular senescence is a significant contributor to intervertebral disc aging and degeneration. However, the application of senotherapies, such as senomorphics targeting senescence markers and the senescenceāassociated secretory phenotype (SASP), remains limited due to challenges in precise delivery. Given that the natural killer group 2D (NKG2D) ligands are increased on the surface of senescent nucleus pulposus (NP) cells, the NKG2Dāoverexpressing NP cell membranes (NNPm) are constructed, which is expected to achieve a dual targeting effect toward senescent NP cells based on homologous membrane fusion and the NKG2Dāmediated immunosurveillance mechanism. Then, mesoporous silica nanoparticles carrying a peroxisome proliferatorāactivated receptorāÉ£ coactivator 1Ī± (PGC1Ī±)inducer (SP) are coated with NNPm (SP@NNPm) and it is found that SP@NNPm selectively targets senescent NP cells, and the SP cores exhibit pHāresponsive drug release. Moreover, SP@NNPm effectively induces PGC1Ī±āmediated mitochondrial biogenesis and mitigates senescenceāassociated markers induced by oxidative stress and the SASP, thereby alleviating punctureāinduced senescence and disc degeneration. This dualātargeting nanotherapeutic system represents a novel approach to delivery senomorphics for disc degeneration treatment
BDS-3 Integrity Risk Modeling and Probability Evaluation
Focusing on the global integrity monitoring performance of the BDS-3, the integrity failure model and effect analysis (IFMEA) of the system space segment and the ground control segment were carried out, and the system integrity risk tree model was established according to the IFMEA results. To evaluate the system’s integrity risk probability more reasonably, this paper establishes an abnormal event prediction model with a Bayesian method, based on actual operation data, under a situation in which the BDS-3 just opened service. With statistical analysis results of system anomalies since 27 December 2018—which is the date the BDS-3 began providing basic service—according to the anomaly prediction model, the system’s integrity risk probability under the 95% confidence limit was calculated to be approximately 0.9e-7/h, meeting the design index requirements of 1e-7/h. The analysis results also show that the main risk factors affecting the integrity of BDS-3 are ‘pseudorange measurement anomaly’ and ‘miss-detection of satellite autonomous integrity monitoring’. The results are important references with practical engineering significance for improving the integrity performance of BDS-3
Nucleus pulposus cells regulate macrophages in degenerated intervertebral discs via the integrated stress response-mediated CCL2/7-CCR2 signaling pathway
Abstract Lower back pain (LBP), which is a primary cause of disability, is largely attributed to intervertebral disc degeneration (IDD). Macrophages (MĪ¦s) in degenerated intervertebral discs (IVDs) form a chronic inflammatory microenvironment, but how MĪ¦s are recruited to degenerative segments and transform into a proinflammatory phenotype remains unclear. We evaluated chemokine expression in degenerated nucleus pulposus cells (NPCs) to clarify the role of NPCs in the establishment of an inflammatory microenvironment in IDD and explored the mechanisms. We found that the production of C-C motif chemokine ligand 2 (CCL2) and C-C motif chemokine ligand 7 (CCL7) was significantly increased in NPCs under inflammatory conditions, and blocking CCL2/7 and their receptor, C-C chemokine receptor type 2(CCR2), inhibited the inductive effects of NPCs on MĪ¦ infiltration and proinflammatory polarization. Moreover, activation of the integrated stress response (ISR) was obvious in IDD, and ISR inhibition reduced the production of CCL2/7 in NPCs. Further investigation revealed that activating Transcription Factor 3 (ATF3) responded to ISR activation, and ChIP-qPCR verified the DNA-binding activity of ATF3 on CCL2/7 promoters. In addition, we found that Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) inhibition modulated ISR activation, and TLR4 regulated the accumulation of mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (mtROS) and double-stranded RNA (dsRNA). Downregulating the level of mtROS reduced the amount of dsRNA and ISR activation. Deactivating the ISR or blocking CCL2/7 release alleviated inflammation and the progression of IDD in vivo. Moreover, MĪ¦ infiltration and IDD were inhibited in CCR2-knockout mice. In conclusion, this study highlights the critical role of TLR4/mtROS/dsRNA axis-mediated ISR activation in the production of CCL2/7 and the progression of IDD, which provides promising therapeutic strategies for discogenic LBP
Enzymatically Bioactive Nucleus Pulposus Matrix Hydrogel Microspheres for Exogenous Stem Cells Therapy and Endogenous Repair Strategy to Achieve Disc Regeneration
Abstract Exogenous stem cell therapy and endogenous repair has shown great potential in intervertebral disc regeneration. However, limited nutrients and accumulation of lactate largely impair the survival and regenerative capacity of implanted stem cells and endogenous nucleus pulposus cells (NPCs). Herein, an injectable hydrogel microsphere (LMGDNPs) have been developed by immersing lactate oxidase (LOX)āmanganese dioxide (MnO2) nanozyme (LM) into glucoseāenriched decellularized nucleus pulposus hydrogel microspheres (GDNPs) through a microfluidic system. LMGDNPs showed a delayed release profile of LOX and satisfactory enzymatic capacity in consuming lactate. Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) plated on LMGDNPs exhibited better cell viability than cells on GelMA and decellularized nucleus pulposus microspheres (DNP) and showed a obviously increased NPCs phenotype. LMGDNPs prevented MSCs and NPCs death and promoted extracellular matrix synthesis by exhausting lactate. It is determined that LMGDNPs promoted NPCs autophagy by activating transforming growth factor Ī²2 overlapping transcript 1 (TGFB2āOT1), relying on the nanozyme. MSCsāloaded LMGDNPs largely preserved disc hydration and alleviated matrix degradation in vivo. Summarily, LMGDNPs promoted cell survival and matrix regeneration by providing a nutrient supply, exhausting lactate, and activating autophagy via TGFB2āOT1 and its downstream pathway and may serve as an ideal delivery system for exogenous stem cell therapy and endogenous repair
An Engineered Bionic Nanoparticle Sponge as a Cytokine Trap and Reactive Oxygen Species Scavenger to Relieve Disc Degeneration and Discogenic Pain
The progressive worsening of disc degeneration and related
nonspecific
back pain are prominent clinical issues that cause a tremendous economic
burden. Activation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) related inflammation
is a primary pathophysiologic change in degenerative disc lesions.
This pathological state is associated with M1 macrophages, apoptosis
of nucleus pulposus cells (NPC), and the ingrowth of pain-related
sensory nerves. To address the pathological issues of disc degeneration
and discogenic pain, we developed MnO2@TMNP, a nanomaterial
that encapsulated MnO2 nanoparticles with a TrkA-overexpressed
macrophage cell membrane (TMNP). Consequently, this engineered nanomaterial
showed high efficiency in binding various inflammatory factors and
nerve growth factors, which inhibited inflammation-induced NPC apoptosis,
matrix degradation, and nerve ingrowth. Furthermore, the macrophage
cell membrane provided specific targeting to macrophages for the delivery
of MnO2 nanoparticles. MnO2 nanoparticles in
macrophages effectively scavenged intracellular ROS and prevented
M1 polarization. Supportively, we found that MnO2@TMNP
prevented disc inflammation and promoted matrix regeneration, leading
to downregulated disc degenerative grades in the rat injured disc
model. Both mechanical and thermal hyperalgesia were alleviated by
MnO2@TMNP, which was attributed to the reduced calcitonin
gene-related peptide (CGRP) and substance P expression in the dorsal
root ganglion and the downregulated Glial Fibrillary Acidic Protein
(GFAP) and Fos Proto-Oncogene (c-FOS) signaling in the spinal cord.
We confirmed that the MnO2@TMNP nanomaterial alleviated
the inflammatory immune microenvironment of intervertebral discs and
the progression of disc degeneration, resulting in relieved discogenic
pain