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Publication : Inhibition of myeloid differentiation factor 2 by baicalein protects against acute lung injury.

First Author  Chen H Year  2019
Journal  Phytomedicine Volume  63
Pages  152997 PubMed ID  31254764
Mgi Jnum  J:310776 Mgi Id  MGI:6511338
Doi  10.1016/j.phymed.2019.152997 Citation  Chen H, et al. (2019) Inhibition of myeloid differentiation factor 2 by baicalein protects against acute lung injury. Phytomedicine 63:152997
abstractText  BACKGROUND: ALI/ARDS is characterized by severe hypoxemic respiratory failure attributed to inflammatory tissue injury. There are no treatment modalities able to prevent/reverse the dire pathological sequelae in these patients. Evidence links the inflammatory lung injury to uncontrolled activation of the immune signaling complex, TLR4-MD2 (Toll-like receptor-myeloid differentiation factor 2). Baicalein, a natural flavonoid, is reported to have robust anti-inflammatory properties, but its inhibition mechanism remains unclear. HYPOTHESIS/PURPOSE: This study investigated the protective mechanisms of baicalein on ALI/ARDS. METHODS: We used two experimental mouse models of LPS-induced ALI, pulmonary infection model (intratracheal LPS), and systemic infection model (intravenous LPS). Blood, BALF, lung and liver tissues were analyzed using routine methods. In vitro studies using peritoneal mouse macrophages or recombinant proteins were designed to elucidate inhibition mechanisms of baicalein. RESULTS: Our critical new findings revealed that Baicalein was an MD2 inhibitor, directly bound to MD2, effectively suppressing TLR4-MD2 activation and the subsequent MAPK and NF-kappaB signaling. The inhibited MD2 prevented development of inflammatory tissue injury and improved survival. The importance of MD2 in the inflammatory injury in ALI was corroborated by data obtained from MD2(-/-) mice, which did not develop the characteristic LPS-induced lung tissue damage. Thus, the findings indicated that MD2 was critical for development of ALI, functioning as an early upstream signal driving the progression of inflammatory injury. CONCLUSION: Baicalein, as a direct and selective MD2 inhibitor, inhibited the early upstream TLR4-MD2 signaling and is a promising therapeutic agent for the treatment of ALI/ARDS.
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