Borlongan Cesar V, Hayashi Teruo, Oeltgen Peter R, Su Tsung-Ping, Wang Yun
National Institutes of Health, National Institute on Drug Abuse Intramural Research Program, Cellular Neurobiology Branch, Baltimore, MD, USA.
BMC Biol. 2009 Jun 17;7:31. doi: 10.1186/1741-7007-7-31.
Delta opioid peptide [D-ala2,D-leU5]enkephalin (DADLE) induces hibernation in summer ground squirrels, and enhances preservation and survival of isolated or transplanted lungs and hearts. In the present study, we investigated the protective effect of DADLE in the central nervous system.
Adult Sprague-Dawley rats were pretreated with DADLE (4 mg/kg every 2 h x 4 injections, i.p.) or saline prior to unilateral occlusion of the middle cerebral artery (MCA). Daily behavioral tests revealed that ischemic animals treated with DADLE did not show any significant behavioral dysfunctions compared with saline-treated ischemic animals. Opioid antagonists only transiently inhibited the protective effect of DADLE, indicating the participation of non-opioid mechanisms in DADLE neuroprotection. Histological examination using triphenyltetrazolium chloride (TTC) revealed that brains from ischemic animals treated with DADLE, either alone or with adjuvant opioid blockers, exhibited almost completely intact striata. In contrast, brains from ischemic animals that received saline showed significant infarction in the lateral striatum. Analyses of apoptotic cell death revealed a significant increase in the p-53 mRNA expression in the striatum of ischemic animals that received saline, while those that received DADLE exhibited near normal striatal p-53 expression. This protective effect was accompanied by significant increments in protein levels of glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor in the striatum of DADLE-treated ischemic animals.
These results indicate that DADLE protected against necrotic and apoptotic cell death processes associated with ischemia-reperfusion injury. The present study demonstrates that delta opioids are crucially involved in stroke, suggesting that the opioid system is important in the study of brain injury and protection.
δ阿片肽[D-ala2,D-leU5]脑啡肽(DADLE)可诱导夏季地松鼠进入冬眠状态,并增强离体或移植肺与心脏的保存及存活能力。在本研究中,我们调查了DADLE在中枢神经系统中的保护作用。
成年Sprague-Dawley大鼠在大脑中动脉(MCA)单侧闭塞前,预先接受DADLE(4mg/kg,每2小时注射1次,共4次,腹腔注射)或生理盐水处理。每日行为测试显示,与接受生理盐水处理的缺血动物相比,接受DADLE处理的缺血动物未表现出任何明显的行为功能障碍。阿片类拮抗剂仅短暂抑制了DADLE的保护作用,表明非阿片类机制参与了DADLE的神经保护作用。使用氯化三苯基四氮唑(TTC)进行的组织学检查显示,单独接受DADLE处理或联合阿片类阻滞剂处理的缺血动物的大脑,其纹状体几乎完全完整。相比之下,接受生理盐水处理的缺血动物的大脑外侧纹状体出现明显梗死。凋亡细胞死亡分析显示,接受生理盐水处理的缺血动物纹状体中p-53 mRNA表达显著增加,而接受DADLE处理的动物纹状体p-53表达接近正常。这种保护作用伴随着DADLE处理的缺血动物纹状体中胶质细胞源性神经营养因子蛋白水平的显著升高。
这些结果表明,DADLE可防止与缺血再灌注损伤相关的坏死和凋亡细胞死亡过程。本研究表明,δ阿片类物质在中风中起关键作用,提示阿片类系统在脑损伤和保护研究中具有重要意义。