| Literature DB >> 35056106 |
Eva Kudova1, Pavel Mares2, Martin Hill3, Katerina Vondrakova2,4, Grygoriy Tsenov2,4,5, Hana Chodounska1, Hana Kubova2, Karel Vales2,4.
Abstract
Pregnanolone glutamate (PA-G) is a neuroactive steroid that has been previously demonstrated to be a potent neuroprotective compound in several biological models in vivo. Our in vitro experiments identified PA-G as an inhibitor of N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors and a potentiator of γ-aminobutyric acid receptors (GABAARs). In this study, we addressed the hypothesis that combined GABAAR potentiation and NMDAR antagonism could afford a potent anticonvulsant effect. Our results demonstrated the strong age-related anticonvulsive effect of PA-G in a model of pentylenetetrazol-induced seizures. PA-G significantly decreased seizure severity in 12-day-old animals, but only after the highest dose in 25-day-old animals. Interestingly, the anticonvulsant effect of PA-G differed both qualitatively and quantitatively from that of zuranolone, an investigational neurosteroid acting as a potent positive allosteric modulator of GABAARs. Next, we identified 17-hydroxy-pregnanolone (17-OH-PA) as a major metabolite of PA-G in 12-day-old animals. Finally, the administration of PA-G demonstrated direct modulation of unexpected neurosteroid levels, namely pregnenolone and dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate. These results suggest that compound PA-G might be a pro-drug of 17-OH-PA, a neurosteroid with a promising neuroprotective effect with an unknown mechanism of action that may represent an attractive target for studying perinatal neural diseases.Entities:
Keywords: GABA; NMDA; anticonvulsant; metabolomics; neurosteroids; zuranolone
Year: 2021 PMID: 35056106 PMCID: PMC8780580 DOI: 10.3390/ph15010049
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceuticals (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8247
Figure 1Structures of endogenous neurosteroids and neuroactive steroids relevant to this study. Steroidal ring numbering is in red; steroidal rings are in blue. (A) Structures of allopregnanolone, pregnanolone, pregnanolone sulfate, and pregnanolone glutamate. (B) Basics steroidal stereochemistry: the schematic orientation of the substituents and a perspective representation of a planar 5α steroid and a bent molecule of a 5β steroid. Note that when the rings of a steroid are denoted as projections onto the plane of the page, the α substituent (dashed bond) lies below it and the β substituent (bold bond) lies above the plane of the page. (C) Endogenous neurosteroids that were measured in the hippocampal tissue of rats after i.p. administration of PA-G.
Figure 2Effect of pregnanolone sulfate (PA-S) on seizures induced by pentylenetetrazol in 12- (A) and 25-day-old rats (B). From top to bottom: the incidence of generalized seizures (GS) is shown in columns (the black parts indicate complete generalized tonic-clonic seizures; the white parts show generalized clonic seizures without the tonic phase). The severity of seizures is expressed as a score [20], and the latencies of generalized seizures are shown as box plots (min to max) with individual values (circles). # denotes a significant difference in the incidence of GS compared with the controls, * denotes a significant difference in the incidence of TF in seizure severity and GS latency compared with the controls, and 0 means that none of the rats in the group exhibited GS.
Figure 3Effect of pregnanolone glutamate (PA-G) on seizures induced by pentylenetetrazol in 12- (A) and 25-day-old rats (B). From top to bottom: the incidence of generalized seizures (GS) is shown in columns (the black parts indicate complete generalized tonic-clonic seizures; the white parts show generalized clonic seizures without the tonic phase). The severity of seizures is expressed as a score [20], and the latencies of generalized seizures are shown as box plots (min to max) with individual values (circles). # denotes a significant difference in the incidence of GS compared with the controls, * denotes a significant difference in the incidence of TF in seizure severity and GS latency compared with the controls, and 0 means that none of the rats in the group exhibited GS.
Figure 4Effect of zuranolone on seizures induced by pentylenetetrazol in 12- (A) and 25-day-old rats (B). From top to bottom: the incidence of generalized seizures (GS) is shown in columns (the black parts indicate complete generalized tonic-clonic seizures; the white parts show generalized clonic seizures without the tonic phase). The severity of seizures is expressed as a score [20], and the latencies of generalized seizures are shown as box plots (min to max) with individual values (circles). # denotes a significant difference in the incidence of GS compared with the controls, * denotes a significant difference in the incidence of TF in seizure severity and GS latency compared with the controls, and 0 means that none of the rats in the group exhibited GS.
Figure 5Steroidal metabolites identified in the hippocampus of male Wistar rats (P12 and P25 days old) after the administration of PA-G (i.p., 1 mg/kg in CDX). Only the steroids with significant increases above the basal levels (before PA-G application) are shown. The bold solid, thin solid, and thin dashed arrows indicate high, medium, and low conversion, respectively. The values below the name of the steroid compound represent the fold increase in the concentration of that particular compound and the percentage of total significantly increased steroids (in parenthesis) in the rat hippocampus above the basal levels 20 min after PA-G application. The names of steroids exceeding 1% of the total significantly increased 5β steroids are highlighted in bold. The abbreviations in italics represent steroidogenic enzymes in rats. AKR1C8(18): Type 8(18), subfamily 1C aldo-ketoreductase, CYP11B1: steroid 11β-hydroxylase; CYP17A1: steroid 17-hydroxylase-C17,20-lyase; CYP21A1: steroid 21-hydroxylase; GGH: γ-glutamyl hydrolase; HSD17B6: steroid type 6 17β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase; RDH16: Type 16 retinol dehydrogenase.
Steroid concentrations (ng/g or pg/g) in hippocampal tissue of rats (12- and 25-day-old animals) 20 min after PA-G administration (i.p., 1 mg/kg in CDX).
| Steroid | Age (Days) | Control (C) 1 | Intact (I) 2 | PA-G-Treated (P) 3 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pregnenolone (PE) (ng/g) | 12 | 11.3 (9.4, 13.5) | 9.93 (8.21, 11.9) | 4.69 (3.74, 5.8) |
| 25 | 5.68 (4.59, 6.97) | 4.56 (3.39, 6) | 3.44 (2.68, 4.34) | |
| Age: F = 24.8, | ||||
| Pregnenolone sulfate | 12 | 16.9 (12.6, 22.6) | 24 (17.3, 33.4) | 29.5 (22, 39.9) |
| 25 | 8.81 (6.41, 11.9) | 9.86 (7.22, 13.3) | 10.5 (7.74, 14.2) | |
| Age: F = 25.9, | ||||
| Dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) (ng/g) | 12 | 1.01 (0.829, 1.26) | 1.37 (1.09, 1.78) | 1.13 (0.916, 1.42) |
| 25 | 0.779 (0.648, 0.946) | 0.668 (0.56, 0.803) | 0.644 (0.54, 0.773) | |
| Age: F = 21.2, | ||||
| Dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHEA-S) (ng/g) | 12 | 2.5 (2.05, 3.11) | 3.68 (2.83, 5.02) | 4.86 (3.69, 6.81) |
| 25 | 1.42 (1.19, 1.7) | 1.3 (1.09, 1.55) | 1.52 (1.27, 1.82) | |
| Age: F = 63.2, | ||||
| Androstenediol (ng/g) | 12 | 0.57 (0.465, 0.709) | 0.846 (0.67, 1.1) | 0.758 (0.606, 0.968) |
| 25 | 0.39 (0.323, 0.474) | 0.463 (0.373, 0.582) | 0.364 (0.302, 0.441) | |
| Age: F = 23.2, | ||||
| Androstenediol sulfate (ng/g) | 12 | 5.03 (4.47, 5.69) | 7.18 (6.21, 8.34) | 6.07 (5.36, 6.89) |
| 25 | 1.44 (1.28, 1.62) | 1.39 (1.24, 1.57) | 1.62 (1.44, 1.82) | |
| Age: F = 459, | ||||
| Allopregnanolone (ng/g) | 12 | 0.139 (0.0834, 0.218) | 0.254 (0.165, 0.378) | 0.246 (0.159, 0.367) |
| 25 | 0.151 (0.0919, 0.235) | 0.119 (0.0696, 0.19) | 0.144 (0.0869, 0.224) | |
| Age: F = 2.6, | ||||
| 5β-Dihydroprogesterone (pg/g) | 12 | 25.2 (15.8, 39) | 92.9 (54.8, 173) | 477 (214, 1810) |
| 25 | 49.6 (30.4, 83.2) | 48.8 (31.5, 77.2) | 94.3 (58.6, 164) | |
| Age: F = 1.7, | ||||
| Pregnanolone (ng/g) | 12 | 0.234 (0.162, 0.338) | 0.254 (0.183, 0.353) | 63.6 (26, 200) |
| 25 | 0.393 (0.281, 0.553) | 0.106 (0.0704, 0.156) | 5.02 (3.01, 8.95) | |
| Age: F = 6.9, | ||||
| Conjugated pregnanolone (ng/g) | 12 | 0.204 (0.144, 0.285) | 0.381 (0.265, 0.546) | 40.6 (18.7, 110) |
| 25 | 0.615 (0.445, 0.859) | 0.237 (0.162, 0.342) | 6 (3.7, 10.4) | |
| Age: F = 0.3, | ||||
| 3α,20α-Dihydroxy-5β-pregnane (ng/g) | 12 | 0.108 (0.0809, 0.144) | 0.339 (0.248, 0.472) | 8.42 (4.58, 17.2) |
| 25 | 0.0583 (0.0431, 0.078) | 0.0284 (0.0186, 0.041) | 0.919 (0.632, 1.38) | |
| Age: F = 75.2, | ||||
| Conjugated 3α,20α-dihydroxy-5β-pregnane (ng/g) | 12 | 35.8 (22.6, 55.8) | 180 (100, 335) | 3570 (1820, 7580) |
| 25 | 50.6 (32.4, 78.5) | 77.8 (50.2, 121) | 518 (311, 899) | |
| Age: F = 5.9, | ||||
| 17-Hydroxyallopregnanolone (ng/g) | 12 | 7.18 (3.2, 14) | 20 (11.6, 32.4) | 8.36 (4.24, 14.9) |
| 25 | 14 (7.76, 23.5) | 7.57 (3.76, 13.7) | 3.19 (1.2, 6.63) | |
| Age: F = 1.3, | ||||
| Conjugated 17-hydroxyallopregnanolone (pg/g) | 12 | 26.5 (13.8, 45.2) | 21.8 (10.7, 38.5) | 18.9 (7.92, 36.4) |
| 25 | 45.3 (24.7, 75.8) | 40.9 (21.8, 69.4) | 27.1 (13, 48.9) | |
| Age: F = 2.3, | ||||
| 17-Hydroxypregnanolone (ng/g) | 12 | 0.922 (0.588, 1.43) | 2.54 (1.68, 3.93) | 518 (114, 11,000) |
| 25 | 1.14 (0.767, 1.69) | 0.859 (0.573, 1.27) | 40.8 (17.4, 130) | |
| Age: F = 5.8, | ||||
| Conjugated 17-hydroxypregnanolone [pg/g] | 12 | 3.25 (1.5, 6.77) | 5.04 (2.6, 9.78) | 275 (87.5, 1160) |
| 25 | 5.63 (2.7, 11.9) | 2.8 (1.26, 5.84) | 82.7 (32.1, 257) | |
| Age: F = 0.5, | ||||
| 3α,17α,20α-Trihydroxy-5β-pregnane (ng/g) | 12 | 0.64 (0.379, 1.08) | 2.57 (1.59, 4.21) | 5.86 (3.54, 9.88) |
| 25 | 0.399 (0.247, 0.636) | 0.221 (0.132, 0.359) | 0.951 (0.565, 1.61) | |
| Age: F = 32.7, | ||||
| Etiocholanolone (ETIO) (pg/g) | 12 | 53 (45.1, 62.9) | 105 (84.9, 132) | 654 (333, 7570) |
| 25 | 38.9 (33.3, 45.5) | 35.8 (30.1, 42.6) | 76.3 (63.6, 92.9) | |
| Age: F = 69.5, | ||||
1 C = control group (i.p. CDX solution); 2 I = intact control group of animals; 3 P = animals treated with PA-G (i.p., 1 mg/kg in CDX).