Carbon Monoxide Attenuates Dextran Sulfate Sodium-Induced Colitis via Inhibition of GSK-3βSignaling

Author:

Uddin Md. Jamal1,Jeong Sun-oh1,Zheng Min12,Chen Yingqing1,Cho Gyeong Jae3,Chung Hun Taeg1ORCID,Joe Yeonsoo1

Affiliation:

1. School of Biological Sciences, University of Ulsan, Ulsan 680-749, Republic of Korea

2. Department of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Affiliated Hospital of Yanbian University, Yanji 133000, China

3. Department of Anatomy, School of Medicine, Institute of Health Sciences, Gyeongsang National University, Jinju 660-701, Republic of Korea

Abstract

Endogenous carbon monoxide (CO) is produced by heme oxygenase-1 (HO)-1 which mediates the degradation of heme into CO, iron, and biliverdin. Also, CO ameliorates the human inflammatory bowel diseases and ulcerative colitis. However, the mechanism for the effect of CO on the inflammatory bowel disease has not yet been known. In this study, we showed that CO significantly increases survival percentage, body weight, colon length as well as histologic parameters in DSS-treated mice. In addition, CO inhalation significantly decreased DSS induced pro-inflammatory cytokines by inhibition of GSK-3βin mice model. To support the in vivo observation, TNF-α, iNOS and IL-10 after CO and LiCl treatment were measured in mesenteric lymph node cells (MLNs) and bone marrow-derived macrophages (BMMs) from DSS treated mice. In addition, we determined that CO potentially inhibited GSK-3βactivation and decreased TNF-αand iNOS expression by inhibition of NF-κB activation in LPS-stimulated U937 and MLN cells pretreated with CO. Together, our findings indicate that CO attenuates DSS-induced colitis via inhibition of GSK-3βsignaling in vitro and in vivo. Importantly, this is the first report that investigated the molecular mechanisms mediated the novel effects of CO via inhibition GSK-3βin DSS-induced colitis model.

Funder

Korea Research Foundation

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

Cell Biology,Ageing,General Medicine,Biochemistry

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