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Can Bioactive Compounds in Beetroot/Carrot Juice Have a Neuroprotective Effect? Morphological Studies of Neurons Immunoreactive to Calretinin of the Rat Hippocampus after Exposure to Cadmium.

Małgorzata MatysekEdyta Kowalczuk-VasilevRadosław SzalakEwa Baranowska-WójcikMarcin Bartłomiej ArciszewskiDominik Szwajgier
Published in: Foods (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
Cadmium ions (Cd 2+ ) penetrate the blood-brain barrier and can, among other effects, influence intracellular calcium metabolism, leading to neurodegeneration. In the presented work, we estimated the effect of Cd 2+ on the expression of calretinin in the neurons of the rat hippocampus and analyzed the reverse effect of freshly pressed beetroot/carrot juice in this context. In the 12-week lasting experiment, 32 8-week-old male Wistar rats were divided into four experimental groups (n = 8): the control group (C) received pure tap water; the Cd group (Cd)-received Cd 2+ dissolved in tap water (5 mg Cd 2+ /kg b.w.); and two groups received beetroot/carrot juice: the BCJ group was administered only juice, and the Cd + BCJ group received juice with the addition of Cd 2+ (5 mg Cd 2+ /kg b.w.). The exposition to low doses of Cd 2+ caused a significant decrease in calretinin-immunoreactive (Cr-IR) neurons compared to the non-exposed groups. Moreover, the addition of Cd 2+ to tap water reduced the numbers and length of Cr-IR nerve fibers. The negative effect of Cd 2+ was significantly attenuated by the simultaneous supplementation of beetroot/carrot juice (Cd + BCJ). The study showed that the bioactive compounds in the beetroot/carrot juice can modulate Ca 2+ levels in neurons, and thus, potentially act as a neuroprotective factor against neuronal damage.
Keyphrases
  • nk cells
  • spinal cord
  • spinal cord injury
  • poor prognosis
  • risk assessment
  • binding protein
  • protein kinase
  • water soluble
  • peripheral nerve