4.8 Article

Melatonin Attenuates Sepsis-Induced Small-Intestine Injury by Upregulating SIRT3-Mediated Oxidative-Stress Inhibition, Mitochondrial Protection, and Autophagy Induction

Journal

FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.625627

Keywords

melatonin; sepsis; small intestine; SIRT3; mitochondria; autophagy

Categories

Funding

  1. Natural Science Foundation of China [81871604]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Guangdong Province, China [2020A151501361, 2017A030313590]
  3. Outstanding Youths Development Scheme of Nanfang Hospital, Southern Medical University, Guangzhou, China [2016J011]
  4. President Foundation of Nanfang Hospital, Southern Medical University, Guangzhou, China [2016C026, 2019C029]

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Melatonin treatment prolongs survival, ameliorates multi-organ injury, and partially protects intestinal barrier function in sepsis models; it reduces inflammation and oxidative stress by enhancing NF-kappa B and SOD2 deacetylation, respectively; SIRT3-mediated autophagy induction and mitochondrial function preservation contribute to melatonin's alleviation of sepsis-induced small-intestine injury.
Melatonin reportedly alleviates sepsis-induced multi-organ injury by inducing autophagy and activating class III deacetylase Sirtuin family members (SIRT1-7). However, whether melatonin attenuates small-intestine injury along with the precise underlying mechanism remain to be elucidated. To investigate this, we employed cecal ligation and puncture (CLP)- or endotoxemia-induced sepsis mouse models and confirmed that melatonin treatment significantly prolonged the survival time of mice and ameliorated multiple-organ injury (lung/liver/kidney/small intestine) following sepsis. Melatonin partially protected the intestinal barrier function and restored SIRT1 and SIRT3 activity/protein expression in the small intestine. Mechanistically, melatonin treatment enhanced NF-kappa B deacetylation and subsequently reduced the inflammatory response and decreased the TNF-alpha, IL-6, and IL-10 serum levels; these effects were abolished by SIRT1 inhibition with the selective blocker, Ex527. Correspondingly, melatonin treatment triggered SOD2 deacetylation and increased SOD2 activity and subsequently reduced oxidative stress; this amelioration of oxidative stress by melatonin was blocked by the SIRT3-selective inhibitor, 3-TYP, and was independent of SIRT1. We confirmed this mechanistic effect in a CLP-induced sepsis model of intestinal SIRT3 conditional-knockout mice, and found that melatonin preserved mitochondrial function and induced autophagy of small-intestine epithelial cells; these effects were dependent on SIRT3 activation. This study has shown, to the best of our knowledge, for the first time that melatonin alleviates sepsis-induced small-intestine injury, at least partially, by upregulating SIRT3-mediated oxidative-stress inhibition, mitochondrial-function protection, and autophagy induction.

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