Importance of Selenoprotein
O in Regulating Hmgb1:
A New Direction for Modulating ROS-Dependent NETs Formation to Aggravate
the Progression of Acute Liver Inflammation
posted on 2025-04-07, 04:46authored byYu Xia, Kai Chen, Yidan Wang, Qihang Jiang, Yongzhen Du, Dongliu Luo, Xiang Li, Shu Li
Selenoproteins (Sels) are a class of essential biomolecules
that
play critical roles in cellular homeostasis. SelO was identified as the preferential source of selenium in the liver,
implying its potential as a key regulatory factor in hepatic pathophysiology.
Bioinformatics analysis of data from GEO data sets revealed marked
downregulation of SelO in liver injury. However,
its function and regulatory mechanisms in the liver remain unclear.
To address this, we investigated the effect of SelO ablation on acute liver inflammation, focusing on its association
with inflammation and neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) formation.
Wild-type (WT) and SelO-knockout mice were used to
establish a lipopolysaccharide (LPS) exposure model and a coculture
model (AML12 cells and neutrophils) in vitro. Our findings revealed
that LPS stimulation significantly reduced SelO expression
in the WT mouse liver. SelO deletion promoted the
expression of Hmgb1 and marker cytokines for chemokines,
NETs generation, pyroptosis and inflammation, and induced an imbalance
in redox homeostasis. Immunofluorescence, SYTOX staining, and scanning
electron microscopy confirmed that SelO silencing
promoted reactive oxygen species (ROS)-dependent NETs formation. Moreover,
the coculture model demonstrated that excessive NETs formation exacerbated SelO-ablation-induced hepatic inflammation. Importantly,
we confirmed the significant involvement of the Hmgb1/ROS axis in
the development of acute liver inflammation in the absence of SelO. Our results demonstrated that SelO ablation promoted neutrophil recruitment and enhanced ROS-dependent
NETs formation by increasing Hmgb1 expression levels,
thereby aggravating LPS-induced pyroptosis and inflammation. This
study not only uncovered the crucial biological functions of SelO, but also shed light on its regulatory implications
in the inflammatory process.