The present study was undertaken to investigate antioxidant and hypolipidemic effects, as well as its molecular mechanism of wild Lactobacillus plantarum FC225 isolated from fermented cabbages. The scavenging activities of superoxide anion radical, 1,1-diphenyl-2-picrylhydrazyl radical (DPPH) and hydroxyl radical were enhanced by FC225 treatment. The strain FC225 also attenuated hyperlipidemic status, decreased lipid peroxidation, plasma cholesterol, triglyceride and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels in high fat diet-fed mice. Meanwhile, FC225 therapy could significantly elevate the activities of superoxidase dismutase and glutathione peroxidase, and decrease the content of malondialdehyde (MDA) in liver homogenates, whereas there was no change in catalase activity in high fat diet-fed mice. In addition, compared with the control group, FC225 markedly elevated the gene expression of nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2 (Nrf2), which was in parallel with the increased value of CD4+/CD8+ ratio in the FC225-treated hyperlipidemic mice. The results demonstrated that the strain FC225 confers hypolipidemic and antioxidant protective effects which may be attributable to Nrf2 signal pathway mediated antioxidant enzyme expression.
Thymidine phosphorylase (TP; also known as plateletderived endothelial cell growth factor, PD-ECGF) is an angiogenic factor that is chemotactic for endothelial cells and has been found to induce neovascularization in vivo. TP is frequently overexpressed in human solid tumors, where its expression has been correlated with increased tumor microvessel density, invasion, and metastasis, and shorter patient survival. In this report, TP activity in the WiDr colon carcinoma cell line was found to be induced 100-fold by tumor necrosis factor (TNFa), a secretory product of activated macrophages that has indirect angiogenic activities. Increased TP activity was accompanied by increased TP mRNA levels and without an increase in mRNA stability. TNFa-induced TP mRNA levels were reduced by mithramycin, a DNA-binding transcription inhibitor specific for GC-rich sequences. Transcriptional regulation by TNFa was confirmed by transient transfection of WiDr with upstream TP sequences in a luciferase reporter construct. Deletion analysis of the reporter pinpointed two regions of the TP promoter with regulatory elements for both TNFainducible and basal expression, and they contained, respectively, three and one consensus binding sites for the Sp1-family of transcription factors. One additional region contributed only to basal TP expression, and it contained three Sp1 sites. TNFa-induced TP expression decreased when point mutations were made in three of the four Sp1 sites postulated to contribute to both basal and TNFa-inducible expression. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays further demonstrated binding of nuclear Sp1 to these three sites. Sp1-binding activity was also increased in cells treated with TNFa. These studies establish a role for Sp1 in the regulation of expression of the angiogenic factor TP in colon cancer WiDr cells.
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