Affiliation:
1. Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences and Drug Research, Punjabi University, Patiala, (Punjab), India
Abstract
Aim:
The study investigates the effect of Valsartan, an Angiotensin II type 1 receptor
blocker (ARB), on the blunted neuroprotective response of ischemic post-conditioning (iPoCo) in
rats subjected to High Fat Diet (HFD).
Background:
The neuroprotective response of iPoCo is blunted in conditions of vascular endothelial
dysfunction (ED) associated with hypercholesterolemia, diabetes, hypertension, etc.
Objectives:
The study was undertaken to investigate the effect of Valsartan, an ARB, on the blunted
neuroprotective response of iPoCo in rats subjected to HFD.
Methods:
Wistar rats were subjected to HFD for 56 days. The cerebral ischemic injury was induced
by bilateral common carotid artery occlusion (BCCAO) for 12 min followed by reperfusion
of 24 hrs. iPoCo was induced by three preceding cycles of ischemia and reperfusion lasting 1 min
each given immediately after BCCAO at the onset of prolonged reperfusion. The extent of the injury
was assessed in terms of memory impairment using the Morris Water Maze test (MWM), sensorimotor
disturbance using the neurological severity score (NSS), and cerebral infarct size using
triphenyl tetrazolium chloride staining. Series of biochemical estimations including brain thiobarbituric
acid reactive species (TBARS); reduced glutathione (GSH); myeloperoxidase (MPO); tumor
necrosis factor-α (TNF-α); Nrf-2 and serum cholesterol, serum nitrite levels were performed.
Results:
BCCAO produced significant cerebral injury indicated by increased cerebral infarct size,
memory impairment, increased NSS, and various biochemical alterations (increased cholesterol,
TBARS, MPO, TNF-α, Nrf-2, and decreased nitrite and GSH levels). Significant neutrophil infiltration
was also observed. iPoCo attenuated BCCAO-induced injury with respect to the above parameters
in normal rats. The protective response of iPoCo was lost in HFD-treated rats. Treatment
of Valsartan attenuated cerebral injury, potentiated the neuroprotective response of iPoCo in normal
rats, and also restored the blunted neuroprotective effect of iPoCo in HFD-treated rats along
with enhanced Nrf-2 levels.
Conclusion:
Valsartan exerted a neuroprotective effect by virtue of its multiple actions with a crucial
role of Nrf2 activation.
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.
Subject
Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Developmental Neuroscience,Neurology,Neurology (clinical)