N-acetylcysteine Treatment Protects Intestinal Mitochondria in a Surgical Stress Model

Surgery-associated small intestine damage is a clinical complication. It has been found that opening the abdominal cavity during surgery and manipulation of organs, including the intestine, could lead to intestinal barrier disintegrity and the entrance of pathogens to the systemic circulation. Hence...

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Main Authors: Reza Heidari, Khadijeh Mousavi, Shayesteh Amin, Mohammad Mehdi Ommati, Hossein Niknahad
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Shiraz University of Medical Sciences 2020-06-01
Series:Trends in Pharmaceutical Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://tips.sums.ac.ir/article_46535_f80929ed512af354807977dce70ea853.pdf
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spelling doaj-b6a4bd9ddf0f41b994f240da41480f472021-07-14T06:31:00ZengShiraz University of Medical SciencesTrends in Pharmaceutical Sciences2423-56522020-06-0162879610.30476/tips.2020.85960.104246535N-acetylcysteine Treatment Protects Intestinal Mitochondria in a Surgical Stress ModelReza Heidari0Khadijeh Mousavi1Shayesteh Amin2Mohammad Mehdi Ommati3Hossein Niknahad4Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Pharmaceutical Sciences Research CenterPharmaceutical Sciences Research Center, Shiraz university of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, IranPharmaceutical Sciences Research Center, Shiraz university of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, IranCollege of Life Sciences, Shanxi Agricultural University, Taigu, Shanxi 030801, Peoples’ Republic of ChinaPharmaceutical Sciences Research Center, Shiraz university of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, IranSurgery-associated small intestine damage is a clinical complication. It has been found that opening the abdominal cavity during surgery and manipulation of organs, including the intestine, could lead to intestinal barrier disintegrity and the entrance of pathogens to the systemic circulation. Hence, finding agents to protect the intestine during surgical manipulation could have clinical value. Oxidative stress and enterocytes mitochondrial dysfunction and energy (ATP) crisis are the proposed mechanisms for surgery-induced intestinal damage. N-acetylcysteine (NAC) is a thiol reducing agent and radical scavenging molecule which is widely investigated for its pharmacological properties. The current study was designed to evaluate the effects of NAC treatment on the surgery-induced mitochondrial dysfunction in an animal model. Rats were treated with NAC (500 and 1000 mg/kg, oral) and underwent surgical stress. Afterward, the small intestine mitochondria were isolated and assessed. The effects of surgical stress on small intestine mitochondrial was revealed as a significant decrease in mitochondrial dehydrogenase activity, mitochondrial depolarization, decreased mitochondrial ATP levels, and mitochondrial permeabilization. Moreover, the level of alkaline phosphatase secretion from the intestinal brush border was increased. It was found that NAC treatment significantly alleviated ALP levels, and improved mitochondrial indices when this drug was pre-treated (1 week) to rats. Collectively, it could be concluded that NAC treatment might be a therapeutic approach against surgery-induced intestinal damage. The effects of NAC on mitochondrial function seem to has a pivotal role in its protective mechanism of action.https://tips.sums.ac.ir/article_46535_f80929ed512af354807977dce70ea853.pdfantioxidantenergy crisismitochondrionstresssurgery
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Reza Heidari
Khadijeh Mousavi
Shayesteh Amin
Mohammad Mehdi Ommati
Hossein Niknahad
spellingShingle Reza Heidari
Khadijeh Mousavi
Shayesteh Amin
Mohammad Mehdi Ommati
Hossein Niknahad
N-acetylcysteine Treatment Protects Intestinal Mitochondria in a Surgical Stress Model
Trends in Pharmaceutical Sciences
antioxidant
energy crisis
mitochondrion
stress
surgery
author_facet Reza Heidari
Khadijeh Mousavi
Shayesteh Amin
Mohammad Mehdi Ommati
Hossein Niknahad
author_sort Reza Heidari
title N-acetylcysteine Treatment Protects Intestinal Mitochondria in a Surgical Stress Model
title_short N-acetylcysteine Treatment Protects Intestinal Mitochondria in a Surgical Stress Model
title_full N-acetylcysteine Treatment Protects Intestinal Mitochondria in a Surgical Stress Model
title_fullStr N-acetylcysteine Treatment Protects Intestinal Mitochondria in a Surgical Stress Model
title_full_unstemmed N-acetylcysteine Treatment Protects Intestinal Mitochondria in a Surgical Stress Model
title_sort n-acetylcysteine treatment protects intestinal mitochondria in a surgical stress model
publisher Shiraz University of Medical Sciences
series Trends in Pharmaceutical Sciences
issn 2423-5652
publishDate 2020-06-01
description Surgery-associated small intestine damage is a clinical complication. It has been found that opening the abdominal cavity during surgery and manipulation of organs, including the intestine, could lead to intestinal barrier disintegrity and the entrance of pathogens to the systemic circulation. Hence, finding agents to protect the intestine during surgical manipulation could have clinical value. Oxidative stress and enterocytes mitochondrial dysfunction and energy (ATP) crisis are the proposed mechanisms for surgery-induced intestinal damage. N-acetylcysteine (NAC) is a thiol reducing agent and radical scavenging molecule which is widely investigated for its pharmacological properties. The current study was designed to evaluate the effects of NAC treatment on the surgery-induced mitochondrial dysfunction in an animal model. Rats were treated with NAC (500 and 1000 mg/kg, oral) and underwent surgical stress. Afterward, the small intestine mitochondria were isolated and assessed. The effects of surgical stress on small intestine mitochondrial was revealed as a significant decrease in mitochondrial dehydrogenase activity, mitochondrial depolarization, decreased mitochondrial ATP levels, and mitochondrial permeabilization. Moreover, the level of alkaline phosphatase secretion from the intestinal brush border was increased. It was found that NAC treatment significantly alleviated ALP levels, and improved mitochondrial indices when this drug was pre-treated (1 week) to rats. Collectively, it could be concluded that NAC treatment might be a therapeutic approach against surgery-induced intestinal damage. The effects of NAC on mitochondrial function seem to has a pivotal role in its protective mechanism of action.
topic antioxidant
energy crisis
mitochondrion
stress
surgery
url https://tips.sums.ac.ir/article_46535_f80929ed512af354807977dce70ea853.pdf
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