作者
Qiyan Zheng,Xueqin Zhang,Jing Guo,Yahui Wang,Yuhua Jiang,Shunmin Li,Yuning Liu,Wei Jing Liu
摘要
The JinChan YiShen TongLuo (JCYSTL) formula, a traditional Chinese medicine (TCM), has been used clinically for decades to treat diabetic nephropathy (DN). TCM believes that the core pathogenesis of DN is "kidney deficiency and collateral obstruction," and JCYSTL has the effect of "tonifying kidney and clearing collateral," thus alleviating the damage to kidney structure and function caused by diabetes. From the perspective of modern medicine, mitochondrial damage is an important factor in DN pathogenesis. Our study suggests that the regulation of mitophagy and mitochondrial function by JCYSTL may be one of the internal mechanisms underlying its good clinical efficacy. This study aimed to investigate the mechanisms underlying the renoprotective effects of JCYSTL. Unilateral nephrectomy combined with low-dose streptozotocin intraperitoneally injected in a DN rat model and high glucose (HG) plus hypoxia-induced HK-2 cells were used to explore the effects of JCYSTL on the HIF-1α/mitophagy pathway, mitochondrial function and apoptosis. JCYSTL treatment significantly decreased albuminuria, serum creatinine, blood urea nitrogen, and uric acid levels and increased creatinine clearance levels in DN rats. In vitro, medicated serum containing JCYSTL formula increased mitochondrial membrane potential (MMP); improved activities of mitochondrial respiratory chain complexes I, III, and IV; decreased the apoptotic cell percentage and apoptotic protein Bax expression; and increased anti-apoptotic protein Bcl-2 expression in HG/hypoxia-induced HK-2 cells. The treatment group exhibited increased accumulation of PINK1, Parkin, and LC3-II and reduced P62 levels in HG/hypoxia-induced HK-2 cells, whereas in PINK1 knockdown HK-2 cells, JCYSTL did not improve the HG/hypoxia-induced changes in Parkin, LC3-II, and P62. When mitophagy was impaired by PINK1 knockdown, the inhibitory effect of JCYSTL on Bax and its promoting effect on MMP and Bcl-2 disappeared. The JCYSTL-treated group displayed significantly higher HIF-1α expression than the model group in vivo, which was comparable to the effects of FG-4592 in DN rats. PINK1 knockdown did not affect HIF-1α accumulation in JCYSTL-treated HK-2 cells exposed to HG/hypoxia. Both JCYSTL and FG-4592 ameliorated mitochondrial morphological abnormalities and reduced the mitochondrial respiratory chain complex activity in the renal tubules of DN rats. Mitochondrial apoptosis signals in DN rats, such as increased Bax and Caspase-3 expression and apoptosis ratio, were weakened by JCYSTL or FG-4592 administration. This study demonstrates that the JCYSTL formula activates PINK1/Parkin-mediated mitophagy by stabilizing HIF-1α to protect renal tubules from mitochondrial dysfunction and apoptosis in diabetic conditions, presenting a promising therapy for the treatment of DN.