Journal of Pharmacological Sciences (Nov 2020)

Chrysophanol attenuates hepatitis B virus X protein-induced hepatic stellate cell fibrosis by regulating endoplasmic reticulum stress and ferroptosis

  • Chan-Yen Kuo,
  • Valeria Chiu,
  • Po-Chun Hsieh,
  • Chun-Yen Huang,
  • S. Joseph Huang,
  • I-Shiang Tzeng,
  • Fu-Ming Tsai,
  • Mao-Liang Chen,
  • Chien-Ting Liu,
  • Yi-Ru Chen

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 144, no. 3
pp. 172 – 182

Abstract

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Hepatitis B virus X protein (HBx) and hepatic stellate cells (HSCs) are critical for liver fibrosis development. Anti-fibrosis occurs via reversion to quiescent-type HSCs or clearance of HSCs via apoptosis or ferroptosis. We aimed to elucidate the role of chrysophanol in rat HSC-T6 cells expressing HBx and investigate whether chrysophanol (isolated from Rheum palmatum rhizomes) influences cell death via ferroptosis in vitro. Analysis of lipid reactive oxygen species (ROS), Bip, CHOP, p-IRE1α, GPX4, SLC7A11, α-SMA, and CTGF showed that chrysophanol attenuated HBx-repressed cell death. Chrysophanol can impair HBx-induced activation of HSCs via endoplasmic reticulum stress (ER stress) and ferroptosis-dependent and GPX4-independent pathways.

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