Melatonin promotes cell cycle progression of neural stem cells subjected to manganese via Nurr1.
Nan ChenHan ZhouBin HeSen PengFeng DingQi-Hao LiuZhuo MaWei LiuBin XuPublished in: Environmental toxicology (2024)
Excessive exposure to manganese (Mn) through drinking water and food during pregnancy significantly heightens the likelihood of neurodevelopmental damage in offspring. Multiple studies have indicated that melatonin (Mel) may help to relieve neurodevelopmental disorders caused by Mn, but potential mechanisms underlying this effect require further exploration. Here, we utilized primary neural stem cells (NSCs) as a model to elucidate the molecular mechanism underlying the protective function of Mel on Mn-induced cell proliferation dysfunction and cycle arrest. Our results showed that Mn disrupted the cell cycle in NSCs by suppressing positive regulatory proteins (CDK2, Cyclin A, Cyclin D 1 , and E2F1) and enhancing negative ones (p27 KIP1 and p57 KIP2 ), leading to cell proliferation dysfunction. Mel inhibited the Mn-dependent changes to these proteins and the cell cycle through nuclear receptor-related protein 1 (Nurr1), thus alleviating the proliferation dysfunction. Knockdown of Nurr1 using lentivirus-expressed shRNA in NSCs resulted in a diminished protective effect of Mel. We concluded that Mel mitigated Mn-induced proliferation dysfunction and cycle arrest in NSCs through Nurr1.
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