Background:
Diabetic cardiotoxicity is commonly associated with oxidative injury, inflammation, and endothelial dysfunction. L-ergothioneine (L-egt), a diet-derived amino acid, has been reported to decrease mortality and risk of cardiovascular injury, provides cytoprotection to tissues exposed to oxidative damage, and prevents diabetes-induced perturbation.
Objective:
This study investigated the cardioprotective effects of L-egt on diabetes-induced cardiovascular injuries and its probable mechanism of action.
Methods:
Twenty-four male Sprague-Dawley rats were divided into non-diabetic (n=6) and diabetic groups (n=18). Six weeks after the induction of diabetes, the diabetic rats were divided into three groups (n=6) and administered distilled water, L-egt (35mg/kg), and losartan (20mg/kg) by oral gavage for six weeks. Blood glucose and mean arterial pressure (MAP) were recorded pre-and post-treatment, while biochemical, ELISA, and Rt-PCR analyses were conducted to determine inflammatory, injury-related and antioxidant biomarkers in cardiac tissue after euthanasia. Also, an in-silico study, including docking and molecular dynamic simulations of L-egt toward the Keap1-Nrf2 protein complex, was done to provide a basis for the molecular antioxidant mechanism of L-egt.
Results:
Administration of L-egt to diabetic animals reduced serum triglyceride, water intake, MAP, biomarkers of cardiac injury (CK-MB, LDH), lipid peroxidation, and inflammation. Also, L-egt increased body weight, antioxidant enzymes, upregulated Nrf2, HO-1, NQO1 expression, and decreased Keap1 expression. The in-silico study showed that L-egt inhibits Keap1-Nrf2 complex by binding to the active site of Nrf2 protein, thereby preventing its degradation.
Conclusion:
L-egt protects against diabetes-induced cardiovascular injury via the upregulation of Keap1-Nrf2 pathway and its downstream cytoprotective antioxidants.