1.Effect of englitazine on improving renal injury in diabetic mice by inhibiting pyroptosis
Yueli PU ; Cuiping LIU ; Yong XU ; Fangyuan TENG ; Yang LONG ; Zongzhe JIANG
Chinese Journal of Endocrinology and Metabolism 2021;37(2):149-155
Objective:To investigate the effect of empagliflozin on diabetic kidney disease in db/db mice and the potential mechanisms.Methods:db/db mice were randomly divided into db/db group and Empa group. C57BL/6J mice were used as normal control group. We measured the level of serum biochemistry and inflammatory cytokines. Pathological changes of kidney were observed by pathological staining. The protein expression levels of NLRP3, cleaved caspase-1 and GSDMD were detected.Results:Compared with db/db group, the level of fasting blood glucose, blood lipids, serum biochemistry, and urinary protein-to-creatinine ratio in Empa group were significantly decreased ( P<0.05). HE staining and Masson staining showed that empagliflozin could significantly improve glomerular pyknosis and renal interstitial fibrosis in db/db mice. Meanwhile, the expressions of NLRP3, cleaved caspase-1, and GSDMD protein were down-regulated ( P<0.05). Conclusion:Empagliflozin improves kidney damage in diabetic model mice, and the possible mechanism is to inhibit the cell pyroptosis signal pathway of NLRP3/caspase-1/GSDMD.
2.Sodium benzoate induces pancreatic inflammation and β-cell apoptosis via benzoylation modification
Dongze LI ; Li ZHANG ; Yanqiu HE ; Tingting ZHOU ; Chenlin GAO ; Pijun YAN ; Zongzhe JIANG ; Yang LONG ; Qin WAN ; Wei HUANG ; Yong XU
Chinese Journal of Endocrinology and Metabolism 2024;40(5):427-435
Objective:To explore whether the food additive sodium benzoate(NAB) induces pancreatic inflammation and β cell apoptosis through the benzoylation(Kbz) modification pathway.Methods:In vivo experiments: C57BL/6J male mice(8 weeks old, 18-20 g) were randomly divided into normal control group(double distilled water feeding) and NAB feeding group(1 g/kg NAB feeding). Blood glucose were measured. After 20 weeks, fasting serum insulin, interleukin(IL)-18, IL-1β, and benzoyl-CoA levels were detected by ELISA method. Bax, IL-18, Pan-Kbz and Pan-Kac were detected by immunohistochemistry staining. In vitro experiments: β-TC-6 cells were cultured with NAB(6 mmol/L) or benzoyl-CoA(100 μmol/L) as stimulator and acyltransferase P300 inhibitor A485(10 μmol/L) as intervention factor. 24 hours later, inflammation, apoptosis, insulin secretion and Pan-Kbz level were detected by qRT-PCR, ELISA and Western blotting.Results:In the in vivo experiments, compared to the NC group, mice in the NAB group exhibited impaired glucose tolerance, decreased fasting insulin levels, significantly increased serum benzoyl coenzyme A concentrations, relatively elevated pancreatic IL-1β, IL-18, and Bax protein expressions, increased levels of Pan-Kbz, while Pan-Kac levels were downregulated(all P<0.05); In vitro experiments, NAB dose-dependently inhibited insulin secretion, promoted the release of Pan-Kbz and inflammatory factors IL-18 and TNF- α, inhibited Bcl-2 expression and up-regulated Bax expression, A485 reversed NAB-induced Pan-Kbz modification, improved NAB-induced inflammation and apoptosis, and promoted insulin secretion(all P<0.05). Conclusion:NAB may induce pancreatic inflammation, β-cell apoptosis, and impair insulin secretion through Kbz modification pathway.
3.Effects of Shuanghuanglian oral liquids on patients with COVID-19: a randomized, open-label, parallel-controlled, multicenter clinical trial.
Li NI ; Zheng WEN ; Xiaowen HU ; Wei TANG ; Haisheng WANG ; Ling ZHOU ; Lujin WU ; Hong WANG ; Chang XU ; Xizhen XU ; Zhichao XIAO ; Zongzhe LI ; Chene LI ; Yujian LIU ; Jialin DUAN ; Chen CHEN ; Dan LI ; Runhua ZHANG ; Jinliang LI ; Yongxiang YI ; Wei HUANG ; Yanyan CHEN ; Jianping ZHAO ; Jianping ZUO ; Jianping WENG ; Hualiang JIANG ; Dao Wen WANG
Frontiers of Medicine 2021;15(5):704-717
We conducted a randomized, open-label, parallel-controlled, multicenter trial on the use of Shuanghuanglian (SHL), a traditional Chinese patent medicine, in treating cases of COVID-19. A total of 176 patients received SHL by three doses (56 in low dose, 61 in middle dose, and 59 in high dose) in addition to standard care. The control group was composed of 59 patients who received standard therapy alone. Treatment with SHL was not associated with a difference from standard care in the time to disease recovery. Patients with 14-day SHL treatment had significantly higher rate in negative conversion of SARS-CoV-2 in nucleic acid swab tests than the patients from the control group (93.4% vs. 73.9%, P = 0.006). Analysis of chest computed tomography images showed that treatment with high-dose SHL significantly promoted absorption of inflammatory focus of pneumonia, which was evaluated by density reduction of inflammatory focus from baseline, at day 7 (mean difference (95% CI), -46.39 (-86.83 to -5.94) HU; P = 0.025) and day 14 (mean difference (95% CI), -74.21 (-133.35 to -15.08) HU; P = 0.014). No serious adverse events occurred in the SHL groups. This study illustrated that SHL in combination with standard care was safe and partially effective for the treatment of COVID-19.
COVID-19
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Humans
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Medicine, Chinese Traditional
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Research
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SARS-CoV-2
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Treatment Outcome