Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

Objective: To investigate the protective effect of lycopene on lung oxidative damage induced by atmospheric fine particulate matter(PM_(2.5)) in rats.

Methods: Sixty 7-week-old male Sprague-Dawley rats were randomly divided into six groups: normal control group, PM_(2.5) model group, reference control group(vitamin E dose group, 7.5 mg/kg), and three lycopene groups with low-dose(5 mg/kg), medium dose(15 mg/kg) and high dose(30 mg/kg), with 10 rats in each group. Except for the control group, all groups were exposed to PM_(2.5) suspension intratracheally(equivalent to 7.5 mg/kg), poisoning 3 times a week, with an interval of 24 hours between each test. The vitamin E intervention group dissolved the salad oil with vitamin E by daily gavage, while the control group received an equal amounts of physiological saline. From the first day of exposure, lycopene was given daily via gavage for 4 weeks. Lycopene groups received lycopene dissolved in salad oil, while control and model groups received salad oil of the same volume. After 4 weeks, all rats were killed. Lung pathology sections were made and serum and lung tissue were collected and homogenized, centrifuge and collect the supernatant. Using UV visible spectrophotometry to measure levels of glutathione peroxidase(GSH-Px), glutataione(GSH), superoxide dismutase(SOD), total antioxidant capacity(T-AOC), malondialdehyde(MDA), glutathione S-transferase(GST), catalase(CAT), hydroxyl radical(OH), nitric oxide(NO). Using enzyme-linked immunosorbent Assays(ELISA) to measure levels of tumor necrosis facto-α(TNF-α), interleukin-6(IL-6), and 8-hydroxy-2-deoxyguanosine(8-OHdG). Lung histopathology was also observed.

Results: Compared to the normal control group, there were significant differences in the content of GSH((9.47±1.37)mg/g vs. (11.10±3.82)mg/g), SOD((9.43±2.41)U/mg vs. (13.82±4.64)U/mg), CAT((5.35±1.88)U/mg vs. (9.54±3.06)U/mg), 8-OHdG((5.52±1.66)μg/g vs. (4.76±1.01)μg/g) in the serum, and GSH((2.19±0.29)mg/g vs. (3.18±0.49)mg/g), SOD((23.98±4.20)U/mg vs. (31.95±5.08)U/mg), CAT((5.85±1.95)U/mg vs. (3.57±1.96)U/mg), GSH-Px((49.15±7.01)mg/g vs. (68.46±11.15)mg/g), OH·((74.02±12.84)U/mg vs. (51.03±14.85)U/mg), TNF-α((5.57±0.72)ng/g vs. (7.83±1.60)ng/g), IL-6((2.68±0.39)μg/g vs. (3.82±1.35)μg/g) in lung tissue homogenates of PM_(2.5) group(P<0.05). These indicated that there were oxidative damage to the body. Compared to the PM_(2.5) group, there were significant differences in the content of GSH((10.57±2.88)mg/g vs. (9.47±1.37)mg/g), SOD((13.51±2.95)U/mg vs. (9.43±2.41)U/mg), 8-OHdG((4.38±0.26)μg/g vs. (5.52±1.66)μg/g) in the serum and GSH((2.72±0.49)mg/g vs. (2.19±0.29)mg/g), GSH-Px((63.46±17.03)mg/g vs. (49.15±7.01)), CAT((3.72±1.28)U/mg vs. (5.85±1.95)U/mg), OH·((65.73±14.88)U/mg vs. (74.02±12.84)U/mg), NO((3.83±1.60)μmol/mg vs. (2.48±1.49)μmol/mg), TNF-α((7.49±1.28)ng/g vs. (5.57±0.72)ng/g), IL-6((3.77±1.35)μg/g vs. (2.68±0.39)μg/g) in lung tissue homogenates of the high-dose lycopene group(P<0.05); the content of GSH((10.57±2.88)mg/g vs. (9.43±2.41)mg/g), CAT((10.61±4.41)U/mg vs. (5.35±1.88)mg/g) in the serum, and GSH((2.77±0.75)mg/g vs. (2.19±0.29)mg/g), SOD((30.88±9.65)U/mg vs. (23.98±4.20)U/mg), CAT((4.52±1.30)U/mg vs. (5.85±1.95)U/mg), TNF-α((7.37±2.50)ng/g vs. (5.57±0.72)ng/g), IL-6((3.80±1.36)μg/g vs. (2.68±0.39)μg/g) in lung tissue homogenates of the medium-dose group(P<0.01). the content of GSH((10.64±2.71)mg/g vs. (9.47±1.37)mg/g), SOD((13.51±2.95)U/mg vs. (9.43±2.41)U/mg) in the serum, and OH·((67.29±16.11)U/mg vs. (74.02±12.84)U/mg) in lung tissue homogenates of the vitamin E group(P<0.05). The PM_(2.5) group had alveolar structure destruction, alveolar septal thickening, pulmonary interstitial oedema, inflammatory infiltration. In the lycopene high-dose intervention group had intact alveolar structure, with a few neutrophil infiltration inside and outside the bronchiolar lumen, the aggregation degree of inflammatory cells was lower than that of the PM_(2.5) group, blood vessels were slightly dilated and congested, and the pulmonary interstitium was slightly widened, medium dose and low dose of lycopene are more obvious. In the vitamin E group performed similar to the lycopene medium-dose intervention group. suggesting a protective effect of lycopene on lung tissue integrity.

Conclusion: Lycopene exhibits protective effects against PM_(2.5)-induced oxidative lung damage, likely through its enhancement of antioxidant enzyme activities, reduction of free radical-induced oxidative damage, and stabilization of biological membranes.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.19813/j.cnki.weishengyanjiu.2024.06.024DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

lung tissue
24
oxidative damage
16
control group
16
tissue homogenates
16
group
14
lycopene
12
protective lycopene
12
lycopene lung
12
intervention group
12
salad oil
12

Similar Publications

Purpose: Computed tomography fluoroscopy (CTF)-guided biopsy is an established technique for sampling pulmonary lesions, particularly with the growing prevalence of lung nodule screening programs. This study investigated procedural and lesion-related factors affecting success and complication rates in routine CTF-guided lung core-needle biopsies at a tertiary center.

Methods: Consecutive patients undergoing percutaneous CTF-guided lung biopsies over a 10-year period (2007-2016) were retrospectively analyzed.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Radical esophagectomy remains the cornerstone of curative treatment for esophageal cancer, but is frequently complicated by postoperative events, most notably anastomotic leakage. Anastomotic leakage, occurring in up to 30% of cases, is multifactorial in origin and significantly increases morbidity and mortality. This review aims to summarize current management strategies, highlight emerging therapies, and identify persistent clinical challenges related to this complication.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: Osimertinib (OSI) therapy, a cornerstone in treating non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), has been severely limited by rapidly developing acquired resistance. Inhibition of bypass activation using a combination strategy holds promise in overcoming this resistance. Biguanides, with excellent anti-tumor effects, have recently attracted much attention for this potential.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Loss of Skeletal Muscle Mass Is Associated With Reduced Cytotoxic T Cell Abundance and Poor Survival in Advanced Lung Cancer.

J Cachexia Sarcopenia Muscle

October 2025

Department of Surgery, NUTRIM School of Nutrition and Translational Research in Metabolism, Maastricht University, Maastricht, the Netherlands.

Background: Body composition alterations such as skeletal muscle (SM) loss in cancer patients are associated with poor survival. In turn, immune cell-driven pathways have been linked to muscle wasting. We aimed to investigate the relationship between body composition, tumour-infiltrating lymphocytes and survival in patients with advanced lung cancer.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Vascular sites have distinct susceptibility to atherosclerosis and aneurysm, yet the epigenomic and transcriptomic underpinning of vascular site-specific disease risk is largely unknown. Here, we performed single-cell chromatin accessibility (scATACseq) and gene expression profiling (scRNAseq) of mouse vascular tissue from three vascular sites. Through interrogation of epigenomic enhancers and gene regulatory networks, we discovered key regulatory enhancers to not only be cell type, but vascular site-specific.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF