The Potential Therapeutic Effect of Guanosine after Cortical Focal Ischemia in Rats

被引:47
作者
Hansel, Gisele [1 ]
Ramos, Denise Barbosa [1 ]
Delgado, Camila Aguilar [1 ]
Souza, Debora Guerini [1 ]
Almeida, Roberto Farina [1 ]
Portela, Luis Valmor [1 ]
Quincozes-Santos, Andre [1 ]
Souza, Diogo Onofre [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Fed Rio Grande do Sul, Inst Ciencias Basicas Saude, Dept Bioquim, Programa Posgrad Ciencias Biol Bioquim, Porto Alegre, RS, Brazil
关键词
OXIDATIVE STRESS; HIPPOCAMPAL SLICES; GLUTAMATE UPTAKE; NEUROBLASTOMA-CELLS; GLUCOSE DEPRIVATION; RODENT MODELS; VITAMIN-C; IN-VITRO; BRAIN; STROKE;
D O I
10.1371/journal.pone.0090693
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Background and Purpose: Stroke is a devastating disease. Both excitotoxicity and oxidative stress play important roles in ischemic brain injury, along with harmful impacts on ischemic cerebral tissue. As guanosine plays an important neuroprotective role in the central nervous system, the purpose of this study was to evaluate the neuroprotective effects of guanosine and putative cerebral events following the onset of permanent focal cerebral ischemia. Methods: Permanent focal cerebral ischemia was induced in rats by thermocoagulation. Guanosine was administered immediately, 1 h, 3 h and 6 h after surgery. Behavioral performance was evaluated by cylinder testing for a period of 15 days after surgery. Brain oxidative stress parameters, including levels of ROS/RNS, lipid peroxidation, antioxidant nonenzymatic levels (GSH, vitamin C) and enzymatic parameters (SOD expression and activity and CAT activity), as well as glutamatergic parameters (EAAC1, GLAST and GLT1, glutamine synthetase) were analyzed. Results: After 24 h, ischemic injury resulted in impaired function of the forelimb, caused brain infarct and increased lipid peroxidation. Treatment with guanosine restored these parameters. Oxidative stress markers were affected by ischemic insult, demonstrated by increased ROS/RNS levels, increased SOD expression with reduced SOD activity and decreased nonenzymatic (GSH and vitamin C) antioxidant defenses. Guanosine prevented increased ROS/RNS levels, decreased SOD activity, further increased SOD expression, increased CAT activity and restored vitamin C levels. Ischemia also affected glutamatergic parameters, illustrated by increased EAAC1 levels and decreased GLT1 levels; guanosine reversed the decreased GLT1 levels and did not affect the EAAC1 levels. Conclusion: The effects of brain ischemia were strongly attenuated by guanosine administration. The cellular mechanisms involved in redox and glutamatergic homeostasis, which were both affected by the ischemic insult, were also modulated by guanosine. These observations reveal that guanosine may represent a potential therapeutic agent in cerebral ischemia by preventing oxidative stress and excitotoxicity.
引用
收藏
页数:10
相关论文
共 66 条
[21]   Therapeutic window for treatment of cortical ischemia with bone marrow-derived cells in rats [J].
dos Santos, Andreia de Vasconcelos ;
Reis, Juliana da Costa ;
Paredes, Bruno Diaz ;
Moraes, Louise ;
Giraldi-Guimaraes, Arthur ;
Mendez-Otero, Rosalia .
BRAIN RESEARCH, 2010, 1306 :149-158
[22]   Acute ischemic stroke: Overview of major experimental rodent models, pathophysiology, and therapy of focal cerebral ischemia [J].
Durukan, Aysan ;
Tatlisumak, Turgut .
PHARMACOLOGY BIOCHEMISTRY AND BEHAVIOR, 2007, 87 (01) :179-197
[23]   Inflammatory Mechanisms of Stroke [J].
Elkind, Mitchell S. V. .
STROKE, 2010, 41 (10) :S3-S8
[24]   Neuroprotective effect of an antioxidant in ischemic brain injury - Involvement of neuronal apoptosis [J].
Fujimura, M ;
Tominaga, T ;
Chan, PH .
NEUROCRITICAL CARE, 2005, 2 (01) :59-66
[25]  
Giuliani P, 2012, PANMINERVA MED S4, V54, P43
[26]   Heart Disease and Stroke Statistics-2013 Update A Report From the American Heart Association [J].
Go, Alan S. ;
Mozaffarian, Dariush ;
Roger, Veronique L. ;
Benjamin, Emelia J. ;
Berry, Jarett D. ;
Borden, William B. ;
Bravata, Dawn M. ;
Dai, Shifan ;
Ford, Earl S. ;
Fox, Caroline S. ;
Franco, Sheila ;
Fullerton, Heather J. ;
Gillespie, Cathleen ;
Hailpern, Susan M. ;
Heit, John A. ;
Howard, Virginia J. ;
Huffman, Mark D. ;
Kissela, Brett M. ;
Kittner, Steven J. ;
Lackland, Daniel T. ;
Lichtman, Judith H. ;
Lisabeth, Lynda D. ;
Magid, David ;
Marcus, Gregory M. ;
Marelli, Ariane ;
Matchar, David B. ;
McGuire, Darren K. ;
Mohler, Emile R. ;
Moy, Claudia S. ;
Mussolino, Michael E. ;
Nichol, Graham ;
Paynter, Nina P. ;
Schreiner, Pamela J. ;
Sorlie, Paul D. ;
Stein, Joel ;
Turan, Tanya N. ;
Virani, Salim S. ;
Wong, Nathan D. ;
Woo, Daniel ;
Turner, Melanie B. .
CIRCULATION, 2013, 127 (01) :E6-E245
[27]   Protection of mice against X-ray injuries by the post-irradiation administration of guanosine and inosine [J].
Gudkov, Sergey V. ;
Gudkova, Olga Y. ;
Chernikov, Anatoly V. ;
Bruskov, Vadim I. .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RADIATION BIOLOGY, 2009, 85 (02) :116-125
[28]   Toward a new role for plasma membrane sodium-dependent glutamate transporters of astrocytes: maintenance of antioxidant defenses beyond extracellular glutamate clearance [J].
Had-Aissouni, Laurence .
AMINO ACIDS, 2012, 42 (01) :181-197
[29]   Vitamin C function in the brain: vital role of the ascorbate transporter SVCT2 [J].
Harrison, Fiona E. ;
May, James M. .
FREE RADICAL BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE, 2009, 46 (06) :719-730
[30]   Bioenergetics of cerebral ischemia: A cellular perspective [J].
Hertz, Leif .
NEUROPHARMACOLOGY, 2008, 55 (03) :289-309