Combined swimming with melatonin protects against behavioural deficit in cerebral ischemia-reperfusion injury induced rats associated with modulation of Mst1- MAPK -ERK signalling pathway.
Samah Mahmoud Abdelaal, Marwa Mohamed Abdel Rahman, Lamiaa Mohamed Mahmoud, Laila Ahmed Rashed, Tarek Ibrahim Abd El-Galil, Manal Moustafa Mahmoud
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: The inconvenience of social and behavioural deficits after cerebral ischaemia reperfusion (I/R) injury is still not well documented.
Aim: We aimed to study the protective effect of preconditioning swimming exercise combined with melatonin against cerebral I/R induced injury.
Methodology: Sixty rats were allocated into 6 groups; groups I and II served as control. Groups 3,4,5,6 subjected to bilateral carotid ligation for 30 minutes (min.) followed by reperfusion. Group 3 left untreated while groups 4 and 6; underwent swimming exercise 30 min/day, five days a week for three weeks before the surgery. Groups 5 and 6 treated with melatonin 30 minutes before the operation, then, all rats in groups 4, 5,6 were subjected to I/R. After that, groups 5 and 6 treated with 2nd dose of melatonin 30 minutes after reperfusion.
Results: Combined strategy exhibited the most neuroprotective effect through prevention of cerebral I/R induced inflammation, oxidative stress and apoptosis with subsequent improvement in socio behaviour deficits and enhanced Glial cell proliferative capacity.
Conclusion: The protective contribution of combined strategy is associated with modulation in Macrophage-stimulating 1/mitogen-activated protein kinase/extracellular signal-regulated kinase (MST1/MAPK/ERK) pathway which may explain, at least in part, its protective potential.
期刊介绍:
Archives of Physiology and Biochemistry: The Journal of Metabolic Diseases is an international peer-reviewed journal which has been relaunched to meet the increasing demand for integrated publication on molecular, biochemical and cellular aspects of metabolic diseases, as well as clinical and therapeutic strategies for their treatment. It publishes full-length original articles, rapid papers, reviews and mini-reviews on selected topics. It is the overall goal of the journal to disseminate novel approaches to an improved understanding of major metabolic disorders.
The scope encompasses all topics related to the molecular and cellular pathophysiology of metabolic diseases like obesity, type 2 diabetes and the metabolic syndrome, and their associated complications.
Clinical studies are considered as an integral part of the Journal and should be related to one of the following topics:
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