Abstract

Silicosis is an occupational disease of the lungs brought in by repeated silica dust exposures. Inhalation of crystalline silica leads to persistent lung inflammation characterized by lung lesions due to granuloma formation. The specific molecular mechanism has not yet been identified, though. The Present study investigated the impact of silica-exposed lung fibrosis and probable molecular mechanisms. Here, Curcumin, derived from Curcuma longa shown to be an effective anti-inflammatory and anti-fibrotic molecule has been taken to investigate its therapeutic efficacy in silica-induced lung fibrosis. An experimental model of silicosis was established in mice where curcumin was administered an hour before intranasal silica exposure every alternate day for 35 days. Intranasal Curcumin treatment reduced silica-induced oxidative stress, inflammation marked by inflammatory cell recruitment, and prominent granuloma nodules along with aberrant collagen repair. Its protective benefits were confirmed by reduced MMP9 activities along with EMT markers (Vimentin and α-SMA). It has restored autophagy and suppressed the deposition of damaged mitochondria after silica exposure. Intranasal Curcumin also inhibited oxidative stress by boosting antioxidant enzyme activities and enhanced Nrf2-Keap1 expressions. Higher levels of PINK1, PARKIN, Cyt-c, P62/SQSTM, and damaged mitochondria in the silicosis group were significantly lowered after curcumin and dexamethasone treatments. Curcumin-induced autophagy resulted in reduced silica-induced mitochondria-dependent apoptosis. We report that intranasal curcumin treatment showed protective properties on pathological features prompted by silica particles, suggesting that the compound may constitute a promising strategy for the treatment of silicosis in the near future.

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