Biomedicines (Mar 2021)

Caffeic Acid, One of the Major Phenolic Acids of the Medicinal Plant <i>Antirhea borbonica</i>, Reduces Renal Tubulointerstitial Fibrosis

  • Bryan Veeren,
  • Matthieu Bringart,
  • Chloe Turpin,
  • Philippe Rondeau,
  • Cynthia Planesse,
  • Imade Ait-Arsa,
  • Fanny Gimié,
  • Claude Marodon,
  • Olivier Meilhac,
  • Marie-Paule Gonthier,
  • Nicolas Diotel,
  • Jean-Loup Bascands

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines9040358
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 4
p. 358

Abstract

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The renal fibrotic process is characterized by a chronic inflammatory state and oxidative stress. Antirhea borbonica (A. borbonica) is a French medicinal plant found in Reunion Island and known for its antioxidant and anti-inflammatory activities mostly related to its high polyphenols content. We investigated whether oral administration of polyphenol-rich extract from A. borbonica could exert in vivo a curative anti-renal fibrosis effect. To this aim, three days after unilateral ureteral obstruction (UUO), mice were daily orally treated either with a non-toxic dose of polyphenol-rich extract from A. borbonica or with caffeic acid (CA) for 5 days. The polyphenol-rich extract from A. borbonica, as well as CA, the predominant phenolic acid of this medicinal plant, exerted a nephroprotective effect through the reduction in the three phases of the fibrotic process: (i) macrophage infiltration, (ii) myofibroblast appearance and (iii) extracellular matrix accumulation. These effects were associated with the mRNA down-regulation of Tgf-β, Tnf-α, Mcp1 and NfkB, as well as the upregulation of Nrf2. Importantly, we observed an increased antioxidant enzyme activity for GPX and Cu/ZnSOD. Last but not least, desorption electrospray ionization-high resolution/mass spectrometry (DESI-HR/MS) imaging allowed us to visualize, for the first time, CA in the kidney tissue. The present study demonstrates that polyphenol-rich extract from A. borbonica significantly improves, in a curative way, renal tubulointerstitial fibrosis progression in the UUO mouse model.

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