Sepsis-induced acute lung injury is associated with lung epithelial cell injury. This study analyzed the role of the antimicrobial peptide LL37 with mitochondrial DNA (LL37-mtDNA) and its potential mechanism of action in lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-treated rat type II alveolar epithelial cells (RLE-6TN cells). RLE-6TN cells were treated with LPS alone or with LL37-mtDNA, followed by transcriptome sequencing. Differentially expressed and pivotal genes were screened using bioinformatics tools. The effects of LL37-mtDNA on cell viability, inflammation, apoptosis, reactive oxygen species (ROS) production, and autophagy-related hallmark expression were evaluated in LPS-treated RLE-6TN cells. Additionally, the effects of Hsp90aa1 silencing following LL37-mtDNA treatment were investigated in vitro. LL37-mtDNA further suppressed cell viability, augmented apoptosis, promoted the release of inflammatory cytokines, increased ROS production, and elevated LC3B expression in LPS-treated RLE-6TN cells. Using transcriptome sequencing and bioinformatics, ten candidate genes were identified, of which three core genes were verified to be upregulated in the LPS + LL37-mtDNA group. Additionally, Hsp90aa1 downregulation attenuated the effects of LL37-mtDNA on LPS-treated RLE-6TN cells. Hsp90aa1 silencing possibly acted as a crucial target to counteract the effects of LL37-mtDNA on viability, apoptosis, inflammation, and autophagy activation in LPS-treated RLE-6TN cells.
Keywords: Hsp90aa1; LL37; autophagy; bioinformatics; mtDNA; sepsis-induced acute lung injury.
© 2024 the author(s), published by De Gruyter.