Ameliorative potential of desalted Salicornia europaea L. extract in multifaceted Alzheimer's-like scopolamine-induced amnesic mice model.
Govindarajan KarthivashanShin-Young ParkMee-Hyang KweonJoonsoo KimMd Ezazul HaqueDuk-Yeon ChoIn-Su KimEun-Ah ChoPalanivel GanesanDong-Kug ChoiPublished in: Scientific reports (2018)
The Salicornia europaea L. (SE) plant is a halophyte that has been widely consumed as a seasoned vegetable, and it has been recently reported to counteract chronic diseases related to oxidative and inflammatory stress. In this study, we performed an initial phytochemical analysis with in vitro biochemical tests and chromatographic profiling of desalted and enzyme-digested SE ethanol extract (SE-EE). Subsequently, we evaluated the anti-neuroinflammatory and ameliorative potential of SE-EE in LPS-inflicted BV-2 microglial cells and scopolamine-induced amnesic C57/BL6N mice, respectively. SE-EE possess considerable polyphenols and flavonoids that are supposedly responsible to improve its bio-efficacy. SE-EE dose-dependently attenuated LPS-induced inflammation in BV-2 cells, significantly repressed behavioural/cognitive impairment, dose-dependently regulated the cholinergic function, suppressed oxidative stress markers, regulated inflammatory cytokines/associated proteins expression and effectively ameliorated p-CREB/BDNF levels, neurogenesis (DCX stain), neuron proliferation (Ki67 stain) in scopolamine-administered mice. Thus, SE-EE extract shows promising multifactorial disease modifying activities and can be further developed as an effective functional food, drug candidate, or supplemental therapy to treat neuroinflammatory mediated disorders.
Keyphrases
- oxidative stress
- lps induced
- induced apoptosis
- diabetic rats
- inflammatory response
- high fat diet induced
- cell cycle arrest
- high glucose
- anti inflammatory
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- lipopolysaccharide induced
- dna damage
- signaling pathway
- drug induced
- human health
- stem cells
- radiation therapy
- insulin resistance
- adipose tissue
- poor prognosis
- metabolic syndrome
- type diabetes
- squamous cell carcinoma
- transcription factor
- wild type
- bone marrow
- mass spectrometry
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- spinal cord injury
- cell therapy
- electronic health record
- anaerobic digestion