Integrated inflammatory signaling landscape response after delivering Elovanoid free-fatty-acid precursors leading to experimental stroke neuroprotection

Despite efforts to identify modulatory neuroprotective mechanisms of damaging ischemic stroke cascade signaling, a void remains on an effective potential therapeutic. The present study defines neuroprotection by very long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acid (VLC-PUFA) Elovanoid (ELV) precursors C-32:6...

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Veröffentlicht in:Scientific reports 2023-09, Vol.13 (1), p.15841-15841, Article 15841
Hauptverfasser: Reid, Madigan M., Belayev, Ludmila, Khoutorova, Larissa, Mukherjee, Pranab K., Obenaus, Andre, Shelvin, Kierany, Knowles, Stacey, Hong, Sung-Ha, Bazan, Nicolas G.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Despite efforts to identify modulatory neuroprotective mechanisms of damaging ischemic stroke cascade signaling, a void remains on an effective potential therapeutic. The present study defines neuroprotection by very long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acid (VLC-PUFA) Elovanoid (ELV) precursors C-32:6 and C-34:6 delivered intranasally following experimental ischemic stroke. We demonstrate that these precursors improved neurological deficit, decreased T2WI lesion volume, and increased SMI-71 positive blood vessels and NeuN positive neurons, indicating blood–brain barrier (BBB) protection and neurogenesis modulated by the free fatty acids (FFAs) C-32:6 and C-34:6. Gene expression revealed increased anti-inflammatory and pro-homeostatic genes and decreases in expression of pro-inflammatory genes in the subcortex. Additionally, the FFAs elicit a comprehensive downregulation of inflammatory microglia/monocyte-derived macrophages and astrocyte-associated genes in the subcortical region. Functional analysis reveals inhibition of immune-related pathways and production of upstream molecules related to detrimental signaling events in post-stroke acute and subacute phases.
ISSN:2045-2322
2045-2322
DOI:10.1038/s41598-023-42126-w