Possible involvement of iNOS and TNF-α in nutritional intervention against nicotine-induced pancreatic islet cell damage - 03/01/17
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Highlights |
• | Folic acid alone or in combination with vitamin B12 protects against nicotine-induced pancreatic islet cell damage in rat model. |
• | Nicotine induces oxidative stress and proinflammatory cytokines and causes pancreatic islet cell apoptosis which may be a possible mechanism of islet cell damage in this study. |
• | iNOS and TNF-α plays pivotal role in nicotine induced islet cell damage, which was abrogated by supplementation of folic acid in combination with vitamin B12. |
• | Results of this study suggest that nutritional intervention with folic acid and vitamin B12 may be a possible mechanism of physiological detoxification against nicotine-induced toxicity in pancreatic islets. |
Abstract |
Nicotine is the more abundant and most significant components of cigarette smoke. Epidemiological evidence strongly suggests an association between cigarette smoking and pancreatic injury. Although effects of smoking on endocrine pancreas are still controversial Here, we examined the impact and underlying mechanisms of action of folic acid and vitamin B12 on nicotine induced damage in pancreatic islets of rats. Male Wistar rats were treated with nicotine (3mg/kg body weight/day, intraperitonealy) with or without folic acid (36μg/kg body weight/day, orally) and vitamin B12 (0.63μg/kg body weight/day, orally) for 21days. Supplementation with folic acid and vitamin B12 suppressed the nicotine induced changes in HbA1c, insulin, TNF-α, IL-6, generation of reactive oxygen species, and attenuated the changes in markers of oxidative stress. Moreover, folic acid and vitamin B12 also counteracted the increased expression of protein and mRNA contents of TNF-α and iNOS produced by nicotine. Further, folic acid and vitamin B12 in combination limits the nicotine induced changes in cell cycle and excessive apoptosis of the pancreatic β-cells and also successfully blunted the nicotine induced alteration in loss of mitochondrial membrane potential. In conclusion, data demonstrate that folic acid and vitamin B12 may be possible nutritional intervention against cellular oxidative stress, which is a critical step in nicotine-mediated islet injury, and improves islet cell functional status by scavenging free radicals and by inhibiting the generation of pro-inflammatory mediators.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Abbreviations : EDTA, HbA1c, ELISA, TNFα, IL6, HBSS, PBS, ROS, DCFH-DA, ΔΨm, PI, NO, MDA, TBA, NBT, SOD, CAT, H2O2, GSH, DTNB, SDS-PAGE, TBST, BSA, iNOS, RT-PCR, cDNA, DiOC6, ANOVA, SE, IDDM, mRNA, NF-κB, CDK2, CDK4
Keywords : Apoptosis, Islet cells, Oxidative stress, Pro-inflammatory mediators
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Vol 84
P. 1727-1738 - décembre 2016 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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