Open Access

Irisin improves ROS‑induced mitohormesis imbalance in H9c2 cells

  • Authors:
    • Baogui Wang
    • Haibo Xu
    • Shuai Shang
    • Longxiang Liu
    • Chunlong Sun
    • Wen Du
  • View Affiliations

  • Published online on: October 15, 2024     https://doi.org/10.3892/mmr.2024.13364
  • Article Number: 240
  • Copyright: © Wang et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of Creative Commons Attribution License.

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Abstract

Abnormal mitohormesis is a key pathogenic mechanism that induces a variety of cardiac diseases, including cardiac hypertrophy and heart failure. Irisin as a muscle factor serves a cardioprotective role in response to cellular oxidative stress injury. Rat cardiomyocyte cells (H9c2) were treated with 40 µM exogenous H2O2 to establish an oxidative stress model, followed by addition of 75 nM exogenous irisin for experiments to determine mitochondrial membrane potential, reactive oxygen species, and Mitohormesis‑related factors by attrition cytometry. Subsequently, the expression of mitochondrial membrane potential, reactive oxygen species and Mitohormesis‑related factors were continued to be determined by establishing a peroxisome proliferator‑activated receptor γ coactivator‑1 alpha (PGC‑1α) siRNA interference model and continuing the treatment with the addition of 75 nM irisin 12 h before the end of interference. When H9c2 cells underwent oxidative stress, irisin partially improved mitochondrial membrane potential and reactive oxygen species levels and partially restored mitochondrial energy metabolism by upregulating fusion proteins optic atrophy 1 (OPA1) mitochondrial dynamin‑like GTPase and mitofusin 2 and downregulating fission protein dynamin‑related protein 1. Following interference with PGC‑1α, irisin promoted mitochondrial biosynthesis by increasing the mRNA levels of OPA1 and protein levels of cytochrome c oxidase subunit 4. These results suggested that irisin acted partially independently of the PGC‑1α signaling pathway to regulate mitohormesis imbalance due to oxidative stress and maintain energy metabolism by improving mitochondrial structure.

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December-2024
Volume 30 Issue 6

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Copy and paste a formatted citation
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Spandidos Publications style
Wang B, Xu H, Shang S, Liu L, Sun C and Du W: Irisin improves ROS‑induced mitohormesis imbalance in H9c2 cells. Mol Med Rep 30: 240, 2024.
APA
Wang, B., Xu, H., Shang, S., Liu, L., Sun, C., & Du, W. (2024). Irisin improves ROS‑induced mitohormesis imbalance in H9c2 cells. Molecular Medicine Reports, 30, 240. https://doi.org/10.3892/mmr.2024.13364
MLA
Wang, B., Xu, H., Shang, S., Liu, L., Sun, C., Du, W."Irisin improves ROS‑induced mitohormesis imbalance in H9c2 cells". Molecular Medicine Reports 30.6 (2024): 240.
Chicago
Wang, B., Xu, H., Shang, S., Liu, L., Sun, C., Du, W."Irisin improves ROS‑induced mitohormesis imbalance in H9c2 cells". Molecular Medicine Reports 30, no. 6 (2024): 240. https://doi.org/10.3892/mmr.2024.13364