Journal of Pharmacological Sciences (Sep 2023)

Pharmacological inhibition of SMYD2 protects against cisplatin-induced renal fibrosis and inflammation

  • Min Chen,
  • Siyang Zuo,
  • Siyu Chen,
  • Xia Li,
  • Tian Zhang,
  • Dan Yang,
  • Xue Zou,
  • Yuan Yang,
  • Hehua Long,
  • Rui Peng,
  • Huixiong Yuan,
  • Bing Guo,
  • Lirong Liu

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 153, no. 1
pp. 38 – 45

Abstract

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SET and MYND domain protein 2 (SMYD2) can methylate histone H3 at lysine36 (H3K36) and some non-histone substrates to play a role in tumorigenesis. However, It is unclear how SMYD2 contributes to chronic kidney disease (CKD). Here, AZ505 or LLY507, which could inhibit SMYD2, were used in cisplatin-induced CKD to investigate the effects and possible mechanisms by which they might act. We found that high expression of SMYD2 in cisplatin-induced CKD. However, AZ505 or LLY507 can significantly inhibit its expression, improve renal function injury and fibrosis induced by cisplatin, inhibit the transition of epithelial cells to a fibrogenic phenotype and fibrosis-related proteins, inhibit the expression of Inflammatory Cytokines (such as IL-6 and TNF-α), And inhibit the phosphorylation of pro-fibrosis molecule Smad3 and signal transduction and transcription activator-3 (STAT3) and up-regulated the expression of renal protective factor Smad7. In cultured tubular epithelial cells, AZ505 also can inhibit the expression of EMT, fibrosis-related proteins, and inflammatory cytokines in cisplatin-induced tubular epithelial cells. Based on these findings, SMYD2 may be a critical regulator of cisplatin-induced CKD and targeted pharmacological inhibition of SMYD2 may prevent cisplatin-induced CKD through Smad3 or STAT3-related signaling pathways.

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