Melatonin against acute ischaemic stroke dependently via suppressing both inflammatory and oxidative stress downstream signallings.
Kuan-Hung ChenKun-Chen LinSheung-Fat KoJohn Y ChiangJun GuoHon-Kan YipPublished in: Journal of cellular and molecular medicine (2020)
This study tested the hypothesis that melatonin (Mel) therapy preserved the brain architectural and functional integrity against ischaemic stroke (IS) dependently through suppressing the inflammatory/oxidative stress downstream signalling pathways. Adult male B6 (n = 6 per each B6 group) and TLR4 knockout (ie TLR4-/- ) (n = 6 per each TLR4-/- group) mice were categorized into sham control (SCB6 ), SCTLR4-/- , ISB6 , ISTLR4-/- , ISB6 + Mel (i.p. daily administration) and ISTLR4-/- + Mel (i.p. daily administration). By day 28 after IS, the protein expressions of inflammatory (HMBG1/TLR2/TLR4/MAL/MyD88/RAM TRIF/TRAF6/IKK-α/p-NF-κB/nuclear-NF-κB/nuclear-IRF-3&7/IL-1β/IL-6/TNF-α/IFN-γ) and oxidative stress (NOX-1/NOX-2/ASK1/p-MKK4&7/p-JNK/p-c-JUN) downstream pathways as well as mitochondrial-damaged markers (cytosolic cytochrome C/cyclophilin D/SRP1/autophagy) were highest in group ISB6 , lowest in groups SCB6 and SCTLR4-/- , lower in group ISTLR4-/- + Mel than in groups ISTLR4-/- and ISB6 + Mel and lower in group ISB6 + Mel than in group ISTLR4-/- (all P < .0001). The brain infarct volume, brain infarct area and the number of inflammatory cells in brain (CD14/F4-88) and in circulation (MPO+//Ly6C+/CD11b+//Ly6G+/CD11b+) exhibited an identical pattern, whereas the neurological function displayed an opposite pattern of inflammatory protein expression among the six groups (all P < .0001). In conclusion, TLR inflammatory and oxidative stress signallings played crucial roles for brain damage and impaired neurological function after IS that were significantly reversed by Mel therapy.
Keyphrases
- oxidative stress
- induced apoptosis
- toll like receptor
- inflammatory response
- immune response
- resting state
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- diabetic rats
- white matter
- dna damage
- signaling pathway
- cerebral ischemia
- nuclear factor
- functional connectivity
- acute myocardial infarction
- physical activity
- heat shock
- lps induced
- multiple sclerosis
- bone marrow
- cell death
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- stem cells
- adipose tissue
- acute coronary syndrome
- liver failure
- type diabetes
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- heart failure
- skeletal muscle
- nk cells
- pi k akt
- cell cycle arrest
- amino acid
- blood brain barrier
- double blind
- respiratory failure