Oxymatrine prevents NF-κB nuclear translocation and ameliorates acute intestinal inflammation

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Abstract

Oxymatrine is a traditional Chinese herbal product that exhibits anti-inflammatory effects in models of heart, brain and liver injury. We investigated the impact of oxymatrine in an acute model of intestinal injury and inflammation. Oxymatrine significantly decreased LPS-induced NF-κB-driven luciferase activity, correlating with diminished induction of Cxcl2, Tnfaand Il6mRNA expression in rat IEC-6 and murine BMDC. Although oxymatrine decreased LPS-induced p65 nuclear translocation and binding to the Cxcl2 gene promoter, this effect was independent of IκBα degradation/phosphorylation. DSS-induced weight loss and histological damage were ameliorated in oxymatrine-treated C57BL/6-WT-mice. While this effect correlated with reduced colonic Il6and Il1βmRNA accumulation, global NF-κB activity as measured in NF-κBEGFP mice was unaffected. Our data demonstrate that oxymatrine reduces LPS-induced NF-κB nuclear translocation and activity independently of IκBα status, prevents intestinal inflammation through blockade of inflammatory signaling and ameliorates overall intestinal inflammation in vivo.

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Guzman, J. R., Koo, J. S., Goldsmith, J. R., Mühlbauer, M., Narula, A., & Jobin, C. (2013). Oxymatrine prevents NF-κB nuclear translocation and ameliorates acute intestinal inflammation. Scientific Reports, 3. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep01629

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