| Literature DB >> 35484595 |
Qian Xiong1, Xiaohuan Li1, Lei Xia1, Zhengyu Yao1, Xiuyu Shi2, Zhifang Dong3.
Abstract
Neonatal hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy (HIE) induced by perinatal asphyxia is a major cause of neurological disability among infants. Dihydroartemisinin (DHA), derived from artemisinin, well known as an anti-malarial medicine, was proved to be able to inhibit oxidative stress and inflammation. However, whether those functions of DHA play roles in hypoxic-ischemic brain damage (HIBD), an animal model of HIE in patient which also been observed to have oxidative stress and inflammation, is unknown. In this study, we demonstrated that the DHA treatment on newborn rats significantly relieved the neuron loss and motor and cognitive impairment caused by HIBD. One of the underlying mechanisms is that DHA enhanced the anti-oxidant capacity of HIBD rats by up-regulating the total antioxidant capacity (T-AOC), gluathione reductase (GR) and catalase (CAT) while down regulating the pro-oxidative substances including hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), total nitric oxide synthase (T-NOS) and inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS). Thus, our study illustrated that DHA could alleviate the damage of brains and improve the cognitive and motor function of HIBD rats by inhibiting oxidative stress, provided an opportunity to interrogate potential therapeutics for affected HIE patients.Entities:
Keywords: Dihydroartemisinin; Hypoxic-ischemic brain damage; Oxidative stress
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35484595 PMCID: PMC9052669 DOI: 10.1186/s13041-022-00921-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Brain ISSN: 1756-6606 Impact factor: 4.399
Fig. 1DHA treatment reduces the HI induced infarction. a A schematic of experiments time line. b Representative dorsal views of rat brains (P10, 72 h after HI/sham surgery). White arrow indicates the liquefactive necrosis area. c Representative TTC staining coronal sections (2 mm) of brains from panel b. Sections are labeled as five different levels (level 1–level 5) along the anterior (“A”) to posterior (“P”) axis. d Quantification of the cerebral infarct area in brain sections (infarcted area% = white (stainless) area/total area of slice). L: left, R: right. Scale bars = 1 cm
Fig. 2DHA treatment reduces the HI induced neuronal loss. a NeuN immunofluorescence in adult (P42) cortex and hippocampus (coronal). Green: NeuN, blue: DAPI. Red arrows indicate the NeuN+ cell loss in cortex (layer I–VI are labeled). Images in the boxes at the right top corner of NeuN chenel: magnified images of each boxed area. White arrows in the magnified images indicate the NeuN+ cell loss in CA3 areas of hippocampus. Rectangles in the images of merged chenel indicate the ROI for quantification (cortex: 602.5 μm * 605 μm * 6 per rat; CA1: 500 μm * 185 μm * 6 per rat; CA3: 310 μm * 720 μm * 6 per rat). Scale bars = 1 mm (200 μm for the magnified images). b–d Quantitation of NeuN+ cell numbers in the rectangles of panel a. Relative cell number index = NeuN+ cell numbers/average NeuN+ cell numbers of sham group%
Fig. 3DHA treatment saves the spatial learning and memory ability of rats after HI. a Escape latency of rats for finding the hidden platform during training sessions (day1-day5) in the Morris water maze task. b Escape latency for finding the platform-zone in probe test. c Quantification of the times of the platform-zone crossing in probe test. d Quantification of the time rat spent in the target quadrant in probe test
Fig. 4DHA treatment ameliorates the front limb holding power motor function of rats after HI. a Quantification comparisons of bilateral forelimbs’ strength of rats in each group. b Quantification of the time spent by rats on rotarods (x axis shows the rotary speed of test)
Fig. 5DHA treatment increases the antioxidants level and decrease the pro-oxidants level of HIBD rat brains. a–c Quantification of antioxidants T-AOC, GR and CAT in bilateral cerebral hemispheres. d–f Quantification of pro-oxidants H2O2, TNOS and iNOS in bilateral brain tissues