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NeuroToxicology 2017-Dec

Rifampicin inhibits rotenone-induced microglial inflammation via enhancement of autophagy.

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Yanran Liang
Tianen Zhou
Ying Chen
Danyu Lin
Xiuna Jing
Sudan Peng
Dezhi Zheng
Zhifen Zeng
Ming Lei
Xia Wu

Sleutelwoorden

Abstract

Mitochondrial and autophagic dysfunction, as well as neuroinflammation, are associated with the pathophysiology of Parkinson's disease (PD). Rotenone, an inhibitor of mitochondrial complex I, has been associated as an environmental neurotoxin related to PD. Our previous studies reported that rifampicin inhibited microglia activation and production of proinflammatory mediators induced by rotenone, but the precise mechanism has not been completely elucidated. BV2 cells were pretreated for 2h with rifampicin followed by 0.1μM rotenone, alone or in combination with chloroquine. Here, we demonstrate that rifampicin pretreatment alleviated rotenone induced release of IL-1β and IL-6, and its effects were suppressed when autophagy was inhibited by chloroquine. Moreover, preconditioning with 50μM rifampicin significantly increased viability of SH-SY5Y cells cocultured with rotenone-treated BV2 cells in the transwell coculture system. Chloroquine partially abolished the neuroprotective effects of rifampicin pretreatment. Rifampicin pretreatment significantly reversed rotenone-induced mitochondrial membrane potential reduction and reactive oxygen species accumulation. We suggest that the mechanism for rifampicin-mediated anti-inflammatory and antioxidant effects is the enhancement of autophagy. Indeed, the ratio of LC3-II/LC3-I in rifampicin-pretreated BV2 cells was significantly higher than that in cells without pretreatment. Fluorescence and electron microscopy analyses indicate an increase of lysosomes colocalized with mitochondria in cells pretreated with rifampicin, which confirms that the damaged mitochondria were cleared through autophagy (mitophagy). Taken together, the data provide further evidence that rifampicin exerts neuroprotection against rotenone-induced microglia inflammation, partially through the autophagy pathway. Modulation of autophagy by rifampicin is a novel therapeutic strategy for PD.

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