Mechanistic clues to the protective effect of chrysin against doxorubicin-induced cardiomyopathy: Plausible roles of p53, MAPK and AKT pathways

Mantawy, Eman M.; Ahmed Esmat; El-Bakly, Wesam M.; Salah Eldin, Rania A.; El-Demerdash, Ebtehal;

Abstract


Doxorubicin (DOX) is the mainstay chemotherapeutic agent against a variety of human neoplasmas. However, its clinical utility is limited by its marked cardiotoxicity. Chrysin, is a natural flavone which possesses antioxidant, anti-inflammatory and anti-cancer properties. The current study aimed to investigate the potential protective effect of chrysin against DOX-induced chronic cardiotoxicity and the underlying molecular mechanisms. Male Sprague-Dawley rats were treated with either DOX (5 mg/kg, once a week) and/or chrysin (50 mg/kg, four times a week) for four weeks. Chrysin prevented DOX-induced cardiomyopathy which was evident by conduction abnormalities, elevated serum CKMB and LDH and histopathological changes. Chrysin also ameliorated DOX-induced oxidative stress by decreasing lipid peroxidation and upregulating the antioxidant enzymes. Moreover, chrysin attenuated DOX-induced apoptosis via decreasing expression of p53, Bax, Puma, Noxa, cytochrome c and caspase-3 while increasing expression of Bcl-2. DOX induced activation of MAPK; p38 and JNK and increased expression of NF-κB. Meanwhile, DOX suppressed AKT pathway via decreasing expression of its upstream activator VEGF and increasing expression of PTEN. Conversely, chrysin effectively neutralised all these effects. Collectively, these findings indicate that chrysin effectively protected against DOX-induced cardiomyopathy via suppressing oxidative stress, p53-dependent apoptotic pathway, MAPK and NF-κB pathways while augmenting the VEGF/AKT pathway.


Other data

Title Mechanistic clues to the protective effect of chrysin against doxorubicin-induced cardiomyopathy: Plausible roles of p53, MAPK and AKT pathways
Authors Mantawy, Eman M.; Ahmed Esmat ; El-Bakly, Wesam M.; Salah Eldin, Rania A.; El-Demerdash, Ebtehal
Keywords PROGRAMMED CELL-DEATH;NF-KAPPA-B;OXIDATIVE STRESS;INDUCED APOPTOSIS;INDUCED CARDIOTOXICITY;HYDROGEN-PEROXIDE;UP-REGULATION;BCL-2 FAMILY;IN-VIVO;MITOCHONDRIAL APOPTOSIS
Issue Date 1-Dec-2017
Publisher NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
Journal Scientific Reports 
ISSN 2045-2322
DOI 10.1038/s41598-017-05005-9
PubMed ID 28684738
Scopus ID 2-s2.0-85021957186
Web of science ID WOS:000404841100051

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