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1.
Int Immunopharmacol ; 141: 112963, 2024 Aug 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39159560

ABSTRACT

Fulminant viral hepatitis (FH) represents a significant clinical challenge, with its pathogenesis not yet fully elucidated. Heat shock protein (HSP)70, a molecular chaperone protein with a broad range of cytoprotective functions, is upregulated in response to stress. However, the role of HSP70 in FH remains to be investigated. Notably, HSP70 expression is upregulated in the livers of coronavirus-infected mice and patients. Therefore, we investigated the mechanistic role of HSP70 in coronavirus-associated FH pathogenesis. FH was induced in HSP70-deficient (HSP70 KO) mice or in WT mice treated with the HSP70 inhibitor VER155008 when infected with the mouse hepatitis virus strain A59 (MHV-A59). MHV-A59-infected HSP70 KO mice exhibited significantly reduced liver damage and mortality. This effect was attributed to decreased infiltration of monocyte-macrophages and neutrophils in the liver of HSP70 KO mice, resulting in lower levels of inflammatory cytokines such as IL-1ß, TNFα, and IL-6, and a reduced viral load. Moreover, treatment with the HSP70 inhibitor VER155008 protected mice from MHV-A59-induced liver damage and FH mortality. In summary, HSP70 promotes coronavirus-induced FH pathogenesis by enhancing the infiltration of monocyte-macrophages and neutrophils and promoting the secretion of inflammatory cytokines. Therefore, HSP70 is a potential therapeutic target in viral FH intervention.

2.
Adv Sci (Weinh) ; : e2401855, 2024 Jul 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38973158

ABSTRACT

Clinically, chronic pain and depression often coexist in multiple diseases and reciprocally reinforce each other, which greatly escalates the difficulty of treatment. The neural circuit mechanism underlying the chronic pain/depression comorbidity remains unclear. The present study reports that two distinct subregions in the paraventricular thalamus (PVT) play different roles in this pathological process. In the first subregion PVT posterior (PVP), glutamatergic neurons (PVPGlu) send signals to GABAergic neurons (VLPAGGABA) in the ventrolateral periaqueductal gray (VLPAG), which mediates painful behavior in comorbidity. Meanwhile, in another subregion PVT anterior (PVA), glutamatergic neurons (PVAGlu) send signals to the nucleus accumbens D1-positive neurons and D2-positive neurons (NAcD1→D2), which is involved in depression-like behavior in comorbidity. This study demonstrates that the distinct thalamo-subcortical circuits PVPGlu→VLPAGGABA and PVAGlu→NAcD1→D2 mediated painful behavior and depression-like behavior following spared nerve injury (SNI), respectively, which provides the circuit-based potential targets for preventing and treating comorbidity.

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