Alpha-lipoic acid regulates heme oxygenase gene expression and nuclear Nrf2 activation as a mechanism of protection against arsenic exposure in HepG2 cells

Environ Toxicol Pharmacol. 2010 Mar;29(2):144-9. doi: 10.1016/j.etap.2009.12.004. Epub 2010 Jan 7.

Abstract

Oxidative stress is a known mechanism induced, among other things, by arsenic toxicity. As a response, the cell triggers the synthesis of antioxidant and stress response elements like glutathione and heme oxygenase. Alpha-lipoic acid (ALA) is a well-known antioxidant that confers protection to oxidative stress conditions. We analyzed the effect of ALA pretreatment on Nrf2-responsive gene expression of HepG2 cells exposed to As(3+). Cells were treated with 5mM ALA and 8h later exposed to 50μM As(3+) for 24h, analyzing MTT-activity, glutathione content, Nrf2 induction and antioxidant gene expression. As(3+) increased glutathione (154%), heme oxygenase, glutamate cystein ligase, modifier subunit and metallothionein (35-fold, 10-fold and 9-fold, respectively). ALA prevented the strong expression of heme oxygenase by As(3+) exposure (from 35- to 5-times of control cells), which correlated with the reduction of Nrf2 observed in As(3+) group. ALA pretreatment can down-modulate the response mediated by Nrf2 and provide protection to As(3+) exposed HepG2 cells.