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Melatonin alleviates early brain injury by inhibiting the NRF2-mediated ferroptosis pathway after subarachnoid hemorrhage.

Authors :
Ma, Sheng-ji
Li, Chen
Yan, Cong
Liu, Nan
Jiang, Guang-you
Yang, Hong-rui
Yan, Hao-chen
Li, Ji-yi
Liu, Huai-lei
Gao, Cheng
Source :
Free Radical Biology & Medicine. Nov2023, Vol. 208, p555-570. 16p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Ferroptosis is a novel form of cell death that plays a critical role in the pathological and physiological processes of early brain injury following subarachnoid hemorrhage. Melatonin, as the most potent endogenous antioxidant, has shown strong protective effects against pathological changes following subarachnoid hemorrhage, but its impact on ferroptosis induced by subarachnoid hemorrhage remains unexplored. In our study, we established a subarachnoid hemorrhage model in male SD rats. We found that subarachnoid hemorrhage induced changes in ferroptosis-related indicators such as lipid peroxidation and iron metabolism, while intraperitoneal injection of melatonin (40 mg/kg) effectively ameliorated these changes to a certain degree. Moreover, in a subset of rats with subarachnoid hemorrhage who received pre-treatment via intravenous injection of the melatonin receptor antagonist Luzindole (1 mg/kg) and 4P-PDOT (1 mg/kg), we found that the protective effect of melatonin against subarachnoid hemorrhage includes inhibition of lipid peroxidation and reduction of iron accumulation depended on melatonin receptor 1B (MT2). Furthermore, our study demonstrated that melatonin inhibited neuronal ferroptosis by activating the NRF2 signaling pathway, as evidenced by in vivo inhibition of NRF2. In summary, melatonin acts through MT2 and activates NRF2 and downstream genes such as HO-1/NQO1 to inhibit ferroptosis in subarachnoid hemorrhage-induced neuronal injury, thereby improving neurological function in rats. These results suggest that melatonin is a promising therapeutic target for subarachnoid hemorrhage. [Display omitted] • This research found that ferroptosis occurred in neurons after subarachnoid hemorrhage, and melatonin can act on MT2 to activate KEAP1/NRF2 and downstream antioxidant genes, thereby rescuing ferroptosis and reducing early brain injury after subarachnoid hemorrhage. Melatonin may be a potential drug. MT2 and NRF2 may become new therapeutic targets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
08915849
Volume :
208
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Free Radical Biology & Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
173010289
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2023.09.012