Sinomenine inhibits primary CD4+ T-cell proliferation via apoptosis |
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Authors: | Shu Luan Yin Wu Zhang Jing Tang Bo Kang Yuan-Xi Ding Fan Hua Zi-Chun |
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Affiliation: | State Key Laboratory of Pharmaceutical Biotechnology, Department of Biochemistry, College of Life Sciences, Nanjing University, 22 Hankou Road, Nanjing 210093, P.R. China. |
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Abstract: | Sinomenine is an active component isolated from Sinomenium acutum and is widely used as an immunosuppressive drug for treating autoimmune diseases. CD4(+) T-cell population plays a key role in adaptive immune response and is related to some autoimmune diseases. In this study, we investigated the possible immunosuppressive effect of sinomenine on CD4(+) T cells and its underlying mechanism. Our data demonstrated that sinomenine remarkably suppressed the proliferation of CD4(+) T cells, blocked the cell cycle progression from G0/G1 phase to S plusG2/M phases. Finally, the immunosuppressive activity elicited by sinomenine in CD4(+) primary lymphocytes was found to be largely accounted for by caspase 3-dependent cells apoptosis. Sinomenine did not significantly alter the expression of bcl-2 in activated CD4(+) primary T cells, suggesting that bcl-2 might not be involved in sinomenine-induced T cells apoptosis. In sum, this study proposes a novel mechanism for the immunosuppressive function of sinomenine on primary mouse CD4(+) T cells. |
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Keywords: | Sinomenine CD4+ T cell Cell cycle Caspase 3 Bcl‐2 |
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