Adhatoda vasica rescues the hypoxia-dependent severe asthma symptoms and mitochondrial dysfunction

Author:

Gheware Atish1234,Panda Lipsa54,Khanna Kritika54ORCID,Bhatraju Naveen Kumar5,Jain Vaibhav54,Sagar Shakti54,Kumar Manish5,Singh Vijay Pal5,Kannan Sadasivam6,Subramanian Venkatesan6,Mukerji Mitali1234,Agrawal Anurag54,Prasher Bhavana1234

Affiliation:

1. Genomics and Molecular Medicine, Council of Scientific and Industrial Research-Institute of Genomics and Integrative Biology (CSIR-IGIB), Delhi, India

2. CSIR’s Ayurgenomics Unit, TRISUTRA (Translational Research and Innovative Science ThRough Ayurgenomics), CSIR-IGIB, Delhi, India

3. Centre of Excellence for Applied Development of Ayurveda, Prakriti and Genomics, CSIR-IGIB, Delhi, India

4. Academy of Scientific and Innovative Research (AcSIR), Ghaziabad, India

5. Centre of Excellence for Translational Research in Asthma & Lung disease, CSIR-IGIB, Delhi, India

6. Center for High Computing, CSIR-Central Leather Research Institute (CLRI), Chennai, India

Abstract

Severe asthma is a chronic airway disease that exhibits poor response to conventional asthma therapies. Growing evidence suggests that elevated hypoxia increases the severity of asthmatic inflammation among patients and in model systems. In this study, we elucidate the therapeutic effects and mechanistic basis of Adhatoda vasica (AV) aqueous extract on mouse models of acute allergic as well as severe asthma subtypes at physiological, histopathological, and molecular levels. Oral administration of AV extract attenuates the increased airway resistance and inflammation in acute allergic asthmatic mice and alleviates the molecular signatures of steroid (dexamethasone) resistance like IL-17A, KC (murine IL-8 homologue), and HIF-1α (hypoxia-inducible factor-1α) in severe asthmatic mice. AV inhibits HIF-1α levels through restoration of expression of its negative regulator—PHD2 (prolyl hydroxylase domain-2). Alleviation of hypoxic response mediated by AV is further confirmed in the acute and severe asthma model. AV reverses cellular hypoxia-induced mitochondrial dysfunction in human bronchial epithelial cells—evident from bioenergetic profiles and morphological analysis of mitochondria. In silico docking of AV constituents reveal higher negative binding affinity for C and O—glycosides for HIF-1α, IL-6, Janus kinase 1/3, TNF-α, and TGF-β—key players of hypoxia inflammation. This study for the first time provides a molecular basis of action and effect of AV whole extract that is widely used in Ayurveda practice for diverse respiratory ailments. Further, through its effect on hypoxia-induced mitochondrial dysfunction, the study highlights its potential to treat severe steroid-resistant asthma.

Funder

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research, India

Ministry of AYUSH

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Cell Biology,Physiology (medical),Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine,Physiology

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