The Chinese herb Fructus Broussonetiae aids learning and memory in chronic cerebral hypoperfusion by reducing proinflammatory microglia activation in rats

The neuroprotective role of in a model of chronic cerebral hypoperfusion with cognitive decline was focused on neural plasticity and microglia/macrophage polarization. Chronic cerebral hypoperfusion was induced by bilateral common carotid artery ligation. shortened escape latency and added the numbe...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of integrative neuroscience 2020-03, Vol.19 (1), p.21-29
Hauptverfasser: Liu, Ping, Wang, Li-Ye, Wang, Yu-Qing, Wang, Rong-Liang, Li, Fang-Fang, Zhang, Sijia, Tao, Zhen, Zhao, Hai-Ping, Han, Zi-Ping, Chen, Zhi-Gang, Luo, Yu-Min
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The neuroprotective role of in a model of chronic cerebral hypoperfusion with cognitive decline was focused on neural plasticity and microglia/macrophage polarization. Chronic cerebral hypoperfusion was induced by bilateral common carotid artery ligation. shortened escape latency and added the number of platform crossings of rats, up-regulated the expression of synaptophysin in the gray matter and increased myelin basic protein expression in the white matter. Further mechanistic experiments were conducted to examine microglia activation and M1/M2 polarization. It was shown that reduced the activation of microglia revealed by decreased expression of ionized calcium-binding adapter molecule-1, inhibited M1 polarization of microglia and improved microglial M2 polarization shown by down-regulated the expression of inducible nitric oxide synthase and Fc fragment of IgG receptor IIIa and up-regulated the expression of arginase-1. In conclusion, the Chinese herb can improve cognitive function following chronic cerebral hypoperfusion by down-regulating the activation of microglia, inhibiting microglial M1 polarization, and improving neural plasticity.
ISSN:0219-6352
1757-448X
DOI:10.31083/j.jin.2020.01.1213