Abstract

Doxorubicin (DOX) is broadly used in treating various malignant tumors. However, its cardiotoxicity limits its clinical use. Roxadustat (FG-4592) is a new hypoxia-inducible factor prolyl hydroxylase (HIF-PHD) inhibitor and has been approved for treating anemia in chronic kidney diseases (CKD) patients. However, the role of FG-4592 in DOX-induced cardiotoxicity remains unknown. In this study, mouse cardiac function was evaluated by echocardiography, plasma LDH/CK-MB, and heart HE staining. Cell viability, apoptosis, oxidative stress, inflammation, and HIF-target genes were evaluated in mouse cardiac tissue and cardiac cells exposed to DOX with FG-4592 pretreatment. DOX-sensitive HepG2 and MCF-7 cell lines were used to evaluate FG-4592 effect on the anticancer activity of DOX. We found that FG-4592 alleviated DOX-induced cardiotoxicity shown by the protection against cardiac dysfunction, cardiac apoptosis, and oxidative stress without the effect on inflammatory response. FG-4592 alone did not change the cardiac function, cardiomyocyte morphology, oxidative stress, and inflammation in vivo. FG-4592 could protect cardiomyocytes against DOX-induced apoptosis and ROS production in line with the upregulation of HIF-1α and its target genes of Bcl-2 and SOD2. Importantly, FG-4592 displayed anticancer property in cancer cells treated with or without DOX. These findings highlighted the protective effect of FG-4592 on DOX-induced cardiotoxicity possibly through upregulating HIF-1α and its target genes antagonizing apoptosis and oxidative stress.

Highlights

  • Doxorubicin (DOX) is an effective chemotherapeutic agent which is used in diverse cancers

  • We evaluated the role of FG-4592 in HL-1 and Neonatal Rat Ventricular Cardiomyocytes (NRVMs) cells treated with DOX and found that FG-4592 significantly improved cell apoptosis in HL-1 cells and cell viability in NRVMs (Figures 6F–J)

  • FG4592 is a new hypoxia-inducible factor prolyl hydroxylase (HIF-PHD) inhibitor that has been approved in China to treat chronic kidney diseases (CKD) anemia by stabilizing HIF-1a

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Summary

Introduction

Doxorubicin (DOX) is an effective chemotherapeutic agent which is used in diverse cancers. The clinical application of DOX is severely restricted by its chemotoxicity, especially the cardiotoxicity (Simunek et al, 2009). Left ventricular dysfunction and heart failure were the most severe symptoms of DOX-induced cardiotoxicity (Pacher et al, 2002; Pacher et al, 2003). Dexrazoxane is the only drug licensed by the US Food and Drug Administration for protecting heart against the DOX-induced cardiotoxicity under both experimental and clinical condition (Wouters et al, 2005; Lipshultz et al, 2010). It is important and urgent to find a new agent for treating DOX-induced cardiotoxicity

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