Abstract

Abstract Copper (Cu) is a vital micronutrient required for numerous fundamental biological processes, but excessive Cu poses potential detrimental effects on public and ecosystem health. However, the molecular details linking endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress and apoptosis in duck renal tubular epithelial cells have not been fully elucidated. In this study, duck renal tubular epithelial cells exposed to Cu sulfate (CuSO4) (0, 100 and 200 μM) and a PERK inhibitor (GSK2606414, GSK, 1 μM) for 12 h were used to investigate the crosstalk between ER stress and apoptosis under Cu exposure. Cell and ER morphological and functional characteristics, intracellular calcium (Ca2+) levels, apoptotic rates, ER stress and apoptosis-related mRNA and protein levels were examined. The results showed that excessive Cu could cause ER expansion and swelling, increase the expression levels of ER stress-associated genes (PERK, eIF2α, ATF4 and CHOP) and proteins (p-PERK and CHOP), induce intracellular Ca2+ overload, upregulate the expression levels of apoptosis-associated genes (Bax, Bak1, Caspase9 and Caspase3) and the cleaved-Caspase3 protein, downregulate Bcl-xl and Bcl2 mRNA levels and trigger apoptosis. PERK inhibitor treatment could ameliorate the above changed factors caused by Cu. In conclusion, these findings indicate that excessive Cu could trigger ER stress via activation of the PERK/ATF4/CHOP signaling pathway and that ER stress might aggravate Cu-induced apoptosis in duck renal tubular epithelial cells.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call