Aim Spinal cord injury (SCI) involves multiple pathological processes. Ferroptosis has been shown to play a critical role in the injury process. We wanted to explore whether zinc can inhibit ferroptosis, reduce inflammation, and then exert a neuroprotective effect. Methods The Alice method was used to establish a spinal cord injury model. The Basso Mouse Scale (BMS), Nissl staining, hematoxylin‐eosin staining, and immunofluorescence analysis were used to investigate the protective effect of zinc on neurons on spinal cord neurons and the recovery of motor function. The regulation of the nuclear factor E2/heme oxygenase‐1 (NRF2/HO‐1) pathway was assessed, the levels of essential ferroptosis proteins were measured, and the changes in mitochondria were confirmed by transmission electron microscopy and 5,5′,6,6′‐tetrachloro‐1,1′,3,3′‐tetraethyl‐imidacarbocyanine iodide (JC‐1) staining. In vitro experiments using VSC4.1 (spinal cord anterior horn motor neuroma cell line), 4‐hydroxynonenal (4HNE), reactive oxygen species (ROS), superoxide dismutase (SOD), malondialdehyde (MDA), glutathione (GSH), lipid peroxides, and finally the levels of inflammatory factors were detected to assess the effect of zinc. Results Zinc reversed behavioral and structural changes after SCI. Zinc increased the expression of NRF2/HO‐1, thereby increasing the content of glutathione peroxidase 4 (GPX4), SOD, and GHS and reducing the levels of lipid peroxides, MDA, and ROS. Zinc also rescued injured mitochondria and effectively reduced spinal cord injury and the levels of inflammatory factors, and the NRF2 inhibitor Brusatol reversed the effects of zinc. Conclusion Zinc promoted the degradation of oxidative stress products and lipid peroxides through the NRF2/HO‐1 and GPX4 signaling pathways to inhibit ferroptosis in neurons.
Spinal cord injury (SCI) is a traumatic disease that can cause severe nervous system dysfunction. SCI often causes spinal cord mitochondrial dysfunction and produces glucose metabolism disorders, which affect neuronal survival. Zinc is an essential trace element in the human body and plays multiple roles in the nervous system. This experiment is intended to evaluate whether zinc can regulate the spinal cord and neuronal glucose metabolism and promote motor functional recovery after SCI. Then we explore its molecular mechanism. We evaluated the function of zinc from the aspects of glucose uptake and the protection of the mitochondria in vivo and in vitro. The results showed that zinc elevated the expression level of GLUT4 and promoted glucose uptake. Zinc enhanced the expression of proteins such as PGC-1α and NRF2, reduced oxidative stress, and promoted mitochondrial production. In addition, zinc decreased neuronal apoptosis and promoted the recovery of motor function in SCI mice. After administration of AMPK inhibitor, the therapeutic effect of zinc was reversed. Therefore, we concluded that zinc regulated the glucose metabolism of the spinal cord and neurons and promoted functional recovery after SCI through the AMPK pathway, which is expected to become a potential treatment strategy for SCI.
Wage reform is an important aspect of Chinese economic reform. The success of wage reform is likely to depend upon the following understanding: Neither use of the efficiency‐oriented market wage system nor use of the equity‐oriented planned wage system can solve the dual problem of economic growth and income distribution. A synergy of the two systems will therefore be needed. Such a synergetic wage system, which simultaneously solves the dual problem of production and distribution, can expedite the rise of social productivity – the fundamental mission in the preliminary stage of Chinese socialism. In other words, wages should be differentiated, and the differences should be related to workers′ effort and society′s demand for them. These differences, however, need not be very large.
Background Acute gouty arthritis is inflammatory joint arthritis. Gouty arthritis (GA) involves multiple pathological processes. Deposition of joints by monosodium urate (MSU) crystals has been shown to play a critical role in the injury process. Due to the different effects of MSU stimulation on the joints, the exact changes in the synovial fluid are unknown. We want to explore the changes in proteins and metabolites in the joints of gouty arthritis. Regulating various functional substances in the joint can reduce inflammation and pain symptoms. Methods 10 patients with gouty knee arthritis and 10 normal controls were selected from clinical, surgical cases. The biological function of the metabolome was assessed by co-expression network analysis. A molecular network based on metabolomic and proteomic data was constructed to study critical molecules. The fundamental molecular changes in the relevant pathways were then verified by western blot. Results Proteomic analysis showed that the expressions of proteases Cathepsin B, Cathepsin D, Cathepsin G, and Cathepsin S in synovial fluid patients with gouty arthritis were significantly increased. Enrichment analysis showed a positive correlation between lysosomal and clinical inflammatory cell shape changes. Untargeted metabolomic analysis revealed that lipids and lipoids accumulate, inhibit autophagic flux, and modulate inflammation and immunity in gouty arthritis patients. It was determined that the accumulation of lipid substances such as phospholipase A2 led to the imbalanced state of the autophagy-lysosome complex, and the differentially expressed metabolites of Stearoylcarnitine, Tetradecanoylcarnitine, Palmitoylcarnitine were identified (|log2 fold change|> 1.5, adjusted P value < 0.05 and variable importance in prediction (VIP) > 1.5). The autophagy-lysosomal pathway was found to be associated with gouty knee arthritis. Essential molecular alterations of multi-omics networks in gouty knee arthritis patients compared with normal controls involve acute inflammatory response, exosomes, immune responses, lysosomes, linoleic acid metabolism, and synthesis. Conclusions Comprehensive analysis of proteomic and untargeted metabolomics revealed protein and characteristic metabolite alterations in gouty arthritis, it mainly involves lipids and lipid like molecules, phospholipase A2 and autophagic lysosomes. This study describes the pathological characteristics, pathways, potential predictors and treatment goals of gouty knee arthritis.
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