Biomedicine & Pharmacotherapy (Feb 2024)

Corylifol A suppresses osteoclastogenesis and alleviates ovariectomy-induced bone loss via attenuating ROS production and impairing mitochondrial function

  • HaiShan Li,
  • Wei Deng,
  • JiaMin Yang,
  • YueWei Lin,
  • ShiYin Zhang,
  • ZiXuan Liang,
  • JunChun Chen,
  • MinHua Hu,
  • Teng Liu,
  • GuoYe Mo,
  • Zhen Zhang,
  • DongPing Wang,
  • Peng Gu,
  • YongChao Tang,
  • Kai Yuan,
  • LiangLiang Xu,
  • JiaKe Xu,
  • ShunCong Zhang,
  • YongXian Li

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 171
p. 116166

Abstract

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Osteoporosis is a systemic disease characterized by an imbalance in bone homeostasis, where osteoblasts fail to fully compensate for the bone resorption induced by osteoclasts. Corylifol A, a flavonoid extracted from Fructus psoraleae, has been identified as a potential treatment for this condition. Predictions from network pharmacology and molecular docking studies suggest that Corylifol A exhibits strong binding affinity with NFATc1, Nrf2, PI3K, and AKT1. Empirical evidence from in vivo experiments indicates that Corylifol A significantly mitigates systemic bone loss induced by ovariectomy by suppressing both the generation and activation of osteoclasts. In vitro studies further showed that Corylifol A inhibited the activation of PI3K-AKT and MAPK pathways and calcium channels induced by RANKL in a time gradient manner, and specifically inhibited the phosphorylation of PI3K, AKT, GSK3 β, ERK, CaMKII, CaMKIV, and Calmodulin. It also diminishes ROS production through Nrf2 activation, leading to a decrease in the expression of key regulators such as NFATcl, C-Fos, Acp5, Mmp9, and CTSK that are involved in osteoclastogenesis. Notably, our RNA-seq analysis suggests that Corylifol A primarily impacts mitochondrial energy metabolism by suppressing oxidative phosphorylation. Collectively, these findings demonstrate that Corylifol A is a novel inhibitor of osteoclastogenesis, offering potential therapeutic applications for diseases associated with excessive bone resorption.

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