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Ischemic Preconditioning Upregulates Decoy Receptors to Protect SH-SY5Y Cells from OGD Induced Cellular Damage by Inhibiting TRAIL Pathway and Agitating PI3K/Akt Pathway.

Authors :
Jin, Wei
Xu, Wei
Zhang, Xiaoxiao
Ren, Chuan-cheng
Source :
Molecular Neurobiology; Sep2020, Vol. 57 Issue 9, p3658-3670, 13p
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

As ischemic preconditioning (IPC) represents a potential therapy against cerebral ischemia, the purpose of the present study is to explore the molecular mechanisms of ischemic preconditioning induced cerebral protective effect. Tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) is a member of the tumor necrosis factor superfamily, which induces apoptosis through binding to its death receptors (DR4 and DR5). When TRAIL binds to decoy receptors (DcR1 and DcR2), as DcRs lack intact cytoplasmic death domain, TRAIL fails to induce neuronal apoptosis. In the present study, we demonstrated that ischemic preconditioning upregulated DcR1 and DcR2, which subsequently inhibited oxygen glucose deprivation-induced cellular apoptosis. Then, we investigated the protective molecular mechanism of DcRs after ischemic preconditioning treatment. Results showed that DcR1 could competitively bind to TRAIL and partially inhibit TRAIL-induced cellular apoptosis. On the other hand, DcR2 could disturb DRs-associated death-inducing signaling complex formation (DISC), which further inhibited capase-8 activation. Besides, we also found that ischemic preconditioning activated IPC-induced Akt phosphorylation via regulating DcR2 level. Thus, ischemic preconditioning upregulated decoy receptors, which protected cells from oxygen glucose deprivation-induced cellular damage by inhibiting TRAIL-induced apoptosis and agitating PI3K/Akt pathway. Our data complemented the knowledge of neuroprotective mechanism of ischemic preconditioning and provided new evidence for supporting its clinical application. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
08937648
Volume :
57
Issue :
9
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Molecular Neurobiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
144922067
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12035-020-01978-3