Curcumin alleviates DSS-induced colitis via inhibiting NLRP3 inflammsome activation and IL-1β production.

Journal: Molecular Immunology
Published:
Abstract

Background: NLRP3 inflammasome mediates IL-1β maturation, therefore plays a vital role in the development of IBD. Curcumin is known for possessing strong anti-inflammatory property.

Objective: The present study was to investigate the protective effects of curcumin on dextran sulfate sodium (DSS)-induced colitis through inhibiting NLRP3 inflammasome activation and IL-1β production.

Methods: LPS-primed macrophages were treated with curcumin prior to DSS triggering NLRP3 inflammasome activation, IL-1β secretion and ASC oligomerization were observed. The mechanisms of curcumin in the inhibition of DSS-induced inflammasome activation were explored. Curcumin or caspase-1/NLRP3 inhibitor was administrated respectively in DSS-induced colitis mouse model. The changes of body weight, disease activity index, colon length were measured. Additionally, mature IL-1β and other inflammatory cytokines, MPO activity and histopathological damage were analyzed for the evaluation of colitis severity.

Results: NLRP3 inflammasome activation was dramatically inhibited by curcumin in DSS-stimulated macrophages, as evidenced by decreased IL-1β secretion, less caspase-1 activation and ASC specks. Mechanistically, curcumin prevented DSS-induced K+ efflux, intracellular ROS formation and cathepsin B release, three major cellular events mediating NLRP3 inflammasome activation. In DSS-induced colitis, curcumin administration significantly ameliorated colitis symptoms by reducing weight loss, DAI and colon length shortening. Meanwhile, curcumin significantly decreased the expression of multiple inflammatory cytokines (including mature IL-1β, IL-6, MCP-1), MPO activity, caspase-1 activity as well as histopathological damage. Furthermore, blockage of NLRP3 inflammasome activation in vivo with specific NLRP3 inhibitor abrogated the further inhibitory effect of curcumin on DSS-induced colitis.

Conclusion: Curcumin could strongly suppress DSS-induced NLRP3 inflammsome activation and alleviate DSS-induced colitis in mice, thus it may be a promising candidate drug in clinical application for IBD therapy.

Authors
Zizhen Gong, Shengnan Zhao, Jiefei Zhou, Junkai Yan, Lingyu Wang, Xixi Du, Hui Li, Yingwei Chen, Wei Cai, Jin Wu
Relevant Conditions

Colitis, Viral Gastroenteritis