Apocynin reduced doxycycline-induced acute liver injury in ovariectomized mice

Publication date: Available online 5 March 2016 Source:Toxicology Reports Author(s): Satoru Mitazaki, Midori Hashimoto, Yui Matsuhashi, Shigeyoshi Honma, Miwako Suto, Naho Kato, Kouichi Hiraiwa, Makoto Yoshida, Sumiko Abe To determine the physiological role of estrogen in the development of liver injury, we examined the sensitivities of sham and ovariectomy (ovx) mice against doxycycline (DOXY) −induced acute liver injury. Ovx or sham operation was performed in C57BL/6J wild-type female mice of eight weeks of age. Sham mice and ovx mice were treated with DOXY (240mg/kg ip) 8 weeks after the operation, 30minutes after apocynin (5mg/kg) or saline administration. Blood and liver samples were obtained at 3 and 6h after DOXY administration. Liver dysfunction occurred soon after DOXY administration and became more severe in ovx mice than in sham mice. At early phase after DOXY injection, TNF-α and iNOS inductions upregulated almost the same levels in sham and ovx mice. On the other hand, expression levels of IL-6, IL-10, c-fos, cox-2 and HO-1, downstream genes of TNF-α, were significantly increased in ovx mice compared to those in sham mice, correlated with liver dysfunction. In addition, apocynin, a NADPH oxidase (NOX) inhibitor, totally improved DOXY-induced liver injury in both sham and ovx mice, indicating that reactive oxygen species generated through NOX activation by DOXY are responsible for development of acute liver injury.
Source: Toxicology Reports - Category: Toxicology Source Type: research