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Effect of oxymatrine on hypoxic-ischemic brain injury in neonatal rats
Author(s) -
Chao Wei,
Shujing Zhao,
Ruiqing Diao,
Liang He,
Weizhan Wang,
LI Aihuan
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
tropical journal of pharmaceutical research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.209
H-Index - 36
eISSN - 1596-5996
pISSN - 1596-9827
DOI - 10.4314/tjpr.v20i6.17
Subject(s) - oxymatrine , protein kinase b , hippocampal formation , apoptosis , pi3k/akt/mtor pathway , medicine , endocrinology , hippocampus , neuroprotection , chemistry , pharmacology , biochemistry
Purpose: To study the influence of oxymatrine on hypoxic-ischemic brain injury (HIBI) in neonatal rats. Methods: Newborn SPF Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats were randomly assigned to 3 groups (10 rats/group): control, HIBI and oxymatrine groups. Neurobehavioral latency of each rat was determined after 48 h of treatment, and pathological changes in rat cerebral cortex were evaluated using H&E staining. Hippocampal neurons prepared from rat brain tissue were grouped and treated as per the above in vivo study. Cell survival and neuronal apoptotic changes were measured with CCK-8 and flow cytometric analysis, respectively, while protein expressions of bcl-2, mcl-1, bax, caspase-3, PI3K, p- PI3K, Akt, p-Akt, GSK3β and p-GSK3β were determined with Western blotting. Results: Treatment of HIBI rats with oxymatrine significantly reduced their neurobehavioral latencies (reflex, cliff avoidance reflex, and negative reflex (latencies), but repaired HIBI-induced histological damage in rat cerebral cortex (p < 0.05). It also significantly enhanced the survival of rat hippocampal neurons, while reducing neuronal apoptosis (p < 0.05). Moreover, oxymatrine significantly upregulated bcl-2, mcl-1, p-PI3K, AKT, p-AKT, GSK3β and p-GSK3β protein expressions, but i significantly downregulated the protein expressions of bax and caspase-3 in cerebral cortex of HIBI rat (p < 0.05). Conclusion: These results indicate that oxymatrine reduces neuronal apoptosis and alleviates HIBI in rats via the regulation of proteins associated with PI3K/Akt/GSK3β signal pathway. This finding provides a new research direction on novel botanical monomers for treating HIBI.

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