Edaravone protects primary-cultured rat cortical neurons from ketamine-induced apoptosis via reducing oxidative stress and activating PI3K/Akt signal pathway

  • Qianqian Li
  • , Zhengguo Qiu
  • , Yang Lu
  • , Pan Lu
  • , Jieqiong Wen
  • , Kui Wang
  • , Xijuan Zhao
  • , Rong Li
  • , Hong Zhang
  • , Yan Zhang
  • , Pengyu Jia
  • , Pei Fan
  • , Yuanyuan Zhang
  • , Shuyue Zhang
  • , Haixia Lu
  • , Xinlin Chen
  • , Yong Liu
  • , Pengbo Zhang

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

16 Scopus citations

Abstract

Ketamine caused neuroapoptosis in the development of rat brain, in which oxidative stress play an important role. Edaravone (3-methyl-1-phenyl-2-pyrazolin-5-one), a free radical scavenger, exerts neuroprotective effects in many neurological disease models. Here we investigated whether edaravone protects primary-cultured neurons against ketamine-induced apoptosis and its potential mechanism. Edaravone increased neuronal viability, decreased neuronal apoptosis, increased the ratio of Bcl-2/Bax after ketamine exposure. Edaravone also increased superoxide dismutase (SOD) activity and decreased malondialdehyde (MDA) level in ketamine-exposed neurons. In addition, edaravone increased protein levels of phosphorylated-protein kinase B (p-Akt), phosphorylated-glycogen synthase kinase-3β (p-GSK-3β) and phosphorylated-forkhead box protein O1 (p-FoxO1) in ketamine-exposed neurons. The neuroprotective effects of edaravone were reversed by LY294002, a specific phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) inhibitor. These findings demonstrated that edaravone protected neurons against ketamine-induced apoptosis by diminishing oxidative stress and activating PI3K/Akt signal pathway.

Original languageEnglish
Article number103399
JournalMolecular and Cellular Neuroscience
Volume100
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 2019

Keywords

  • Akt
  • Edaravone
  • Ketamine
  • Neuroapoptosis
  • Neuroprotection
  • Oxidative stress

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