Abstract

Although many efforts have been made to improve management strategies and diagnostic methods in the past several decades, the prevention of anastomotic complications, such as anastomotic leaks and strictures, remain a major clinical challenge. Therefore, new molecular pathways need to be identified that regulate anastomotic healing, and to design new treatments for patients after anastomosis to reduce the occurrence of complications. Rabbits were treated with a MST1/2 inhibitor XMU-XP-1, a Chinese medicine formula Shenhuang plaster (SHP) or a control vehicle immediately after surgery. The anastomotic burst pressure, collagen deposition, and hydroxyproline concentration were evaluated at 3 and 7 days after the surgery, and qRT-PCR and western-blot analyses were used to characterize mRNA and protein expression levels. Both XMU-XP-1 and SHP significantly increased anastomotic burst pressure, collagen deposition, and the concentration of hydroxyproline in intestinal anastomotic tissue at postoperative day 7 (POD 7). Importantly, SHP could induce TGF-β1 expression, which activated its downstream target Smad-2 to activate the TGF-β1 signaling pathway. Moreover, SHP reduced the phosphorylation level of YAP and increased its active form, and treatment with verteporfin, a YAP-TEAD complex inhibitor, significantly suppressed the effects induced by SHP during anastomotic tissue healing. This study demonstrated that activation of the Hippo-YAP pathway enhances anastomotic healing, and that SHP enhances both the TGF-β1/Smad and YAP signaling pathways to promote rabbit anastomotic healing after surgery. These results suggest that SHP could be used to treat patients who underwent anastomosis to prevent the occurrence of anastomotic complications.

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