Abstract

IntroductionPre-eclampsia (PE) is a pregnancy complication that can lead to maternal, fetal, and neonatal deaths in clinical practice. Accumulation of trophoblastic reactive oxygen species (ROS), which could result in oxidative stress and cell apoptosis, is considered to play an important role in PE pathology. It has been reported that aspirin has a positive effect on PE treatment in high-risk pregnant women. MethodsIn vitro, extravillous trophoblast cell line (HTR-8/SVneo) were treated with hydrogen peroxide (H2O2, 150 μM) after the presence of aspirin (90 and 120 μM) with or without GKT137831 (a Nox4 inhibitor, 20 μM). A series of experiments including CCK-8 assays, flow cytometry, biochemical testing, and Western Blotting etc. verified the protective effects and potential mechanisms of aspirin against oxidative stress-induced damage in PE. ResultsOur results demonstrated that H2O2 induces oxidative stress and apoptosis in HTR8/SVneo cells. However, aspirin pretreatment rescue cell viability and reduce LDH activity of HTR-8/SVneo cells. Aspirin can suppress the ROS overproduction and MDA level while increase SOD content and CAT activity. In addition, aspirin pretreatment significantly alleviated cell apoptosis and suppressed the expression of Nox4 and its subunits (p22phox and p47phox) at protein and mRNA levels. The above results were more obvious after the combination of aspirin with GKT137831. DiscussionThis study demonstrated that aspirin protects human trophoblasts against H2O2-induced oxidative stress and cell apoptosis via suppressing NADPH/ROS pathway. These findings provide novel insights for the application of aspirin as a protective and curative agent against PE.

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