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Matrine reduces cigarette smoke-induced airway neutrophilic inflammation by enhancing neutrophil apoptosis

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 10:10 authored by Xuhua Yu, Huei Jiunn Seow, Hao WangHao Wang, Desiree Anthony, Steven BozinovskiSteven Bozinovski, Lin Lin, Jiming Ye, Ross VlahosRoss Vlahos
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) is a major incurable global health burden and will become the third largest cause of death in the world by 2030. It is well established that an exaggerated inflammatory and oxidative stress response to cigarette smoke (CS) leads to, emphysema, small airway fibrosis, mucus hypersecretion, and progressive airflow limitation. Current treatments have limited efficacy in inhibiting chronic inflammation and consequently do not reverse the pathology that initiates and drives the long-term progression of disease. In particular, there are no effective therapeutics that target neutrophilic inflammation in COPD, which is known to cause tissue damage by degranulation of a suite of proteolytic enzymes including neutrophil elastase (NE). Matrine, an alkaloid compound extracted from Sophora flavescens Ait, has well known anti-inflammatory activity. Therefore, the aim of the present study was to investigate whether matrine could inhibit CS-induced lung inflammation in mice. Matrine significantly reduced CS-induced bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) neutrophilia and NE activity in mice. The reduction in BALF neutrophils in CS-exposed mice by matrine was not due to reductions in pro-neutrophil cytokines/chemokines, but rather matrine's ability to cause apoptosis of neutrophils, which we demonstrated ex vivo Thus, our data suggest that matrine has anti-inflammatory actions that could be of therapeutic potential in treating CS-induced lung inflammation observed in COPD.

Funding

Targeting oxidant-dependent mechanisms that drive COPD and its co-morbidities

National Health and Medical Research Council

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History

Journal

Clinical science (London, England : 1979)

Volume

133

Issue

4

Start page

551

End page

564

Total pages

14

Publisher

Portland Press

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2019 The Author(s)

Former Identifier

2006091086

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2019-05-23

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