Title of article :
Iron chelation effect of curcumin and baicalein on aplastic anemia mouse model with iron overload
Author/Authors :
Dijiong, Wu Department of Hematology - First Affiliated Hospital of Zhejiang Chinese Medical University - Hangzhou - Zhejiang, China , Xiaowen, Wen Department of Internal Medicine - Central Hospital of Jinhua Affiliated to Zhejiang University - Jinhua - Zhejiang, China , Linlong, Xu Department of Hematology - Taizhou Central Hospital - Taizhou - Zhejiang, China , Wenbin, Liu Department of Hematology - First Affiliated Hospital of Zhejiang Chinese Medical University - Hangzhou - Zhejiang, China , Huijin, Hu Department of Hematology - First Affiliated Hospital of Zhejiang Chinese Medical University - Hangzhou - Zhejiang, China , Baodong, Ye Department of Hematology - First Affiliated Hospital of Zhejiang Chinese Medical University - Hangzhou - Zhejiang, China , Yuhong, Zhou Department of Hematology - First Affiliated Hospital of Zhejiang Chinese Medical University - Hangzhou - Zhejiang, China
Abstract :
Objective(s): The current work aimed to assess whether curcumin and baicalein can chelate iron in
aplastic anemia (AA) complicated with iron overload, exploring the potential mechanisms.
Materials and Methods: A mouse model of AA with iron overload complication was firstly established.
Low and high-dose curcumin or baicalein treatment groups were set up, as well as the deferoxamine
positive control, normal and model groups (n=8). Hemogram and bone marrow mononuclear cell
detection were performed, and TUNEL and immunohistochemical staining were used to evaluate
hematopoiesis and apoptosis in the marrow. ELISA, Western blot, and qRT-PCR were employed to
assess serum iron (SI), serum ferritin (SF), bone morphogenetic protein 6 (BMP-6), SMAD family
member4 (SMAD4) and transferrin receptor 2 (TfR2) amounts.
Results: Both curcumin and baicalein improved white blood cell (increase of 0.28-0.64×109/l in
high-dose groups) and hemoglobin (increase of around 10 g/l) amounts significantly, which may
related to decreased apoptosis (nearly 30%-50% of that in the model group) in the bone marrow,
while their effects on platelet recovery were limited and inferior to that of deferoxamine (DFO). Both
test compounds up-regulated hepcidin and its regulators (BMP-6, SMAD, and TfR2) at the protein
and mRNA levels; high dosage treatment may be beneficial, being better than DFO administration in
lessening iron deposition in the bone marrow.
Conclusion: Curcumin and baicalein protect hematopoiesis from immune and iron overload-induced
apoptosis, exerting iron chelation effects in vivo.
Keywords :
Anemia , Animal , Aplastic , Baicalein , Curcumin , Deferoxamine , Iron overload , Mice , Models
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics