Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, College of Pharmacy and Allied Health Professions, St John's University, Queens, New York, USA.
PLoS One. 2012;7(10):e44117. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0044117. Epub 2012 Oct 17.
Neurological and cognitive impairment persist in more than 20% of cerebral malaria (CM) patients long after successful anti-parasitic treatment. We recently reported that long term memory and motor coordination deficits are also present in our experimental cerebral malaria model (ECM). We also documented, in a murine model, a lack of obvious pathology or inflammation after parasite elimination, suggesting that the long-term negative neurological outcomes result from potentially reversible biochemical and physiological changes in brains of ECM mice, subsequent to acute ischemic and inflammatory processes. Here, we demonstrate for the first time that acute ECM results in significantly reduced activation of protein kinase B (PKB or Akt) leading to decreased Akt phosphorylation and inhibition of the glycogen kinase synthase (GSK3β) in the brains of mice infected with Plasmodium berghei ANKA (PbA) compared to uninfected controls and to mice infected with the non-neurotrophic P. berghei NK65 (PbN). Though Akt activation improved to control levels after chloroquine treatment in PbA-infected mice, the addition of lithium chloride, a compound which inhibits GSK3β activity and stimulates Akt activation, induced a modest, but significant activation of Akt in the brains of infected mice when compared to uninfected controls treated with chloroquine with and without lithium. In addition, lithium significantly reversed the long-term spatial and visual memory impairment as well as the motor coordination deficits which persisted after successful anti-parasitic treatment. GSK3β inhibition was significantly increased after chloroquine treatment, both in lithium and non-lithium treated PbA-infected mice. These data indicate that acute ECM is associated with abnormalities in cell survival pathways that result in neuronal damage. Regulation of Akt/GSK3β with lithium reduces neuronal degeneration and may have neuroprotective effects in ECM. Aberrant regulation of Akt/GSK3β signaling likely underlies long-term neurological sequelae observed in ECM and may yield adjunctive therapeutic targets for the management of CM.
在寄生虫清除后,即使没有明显的病理或炎症,我们仍在实验性脑疟疾(ECM)模型中观察到长期记忆和运动协调缺陷,这表明 ECM 小鼠的长期负面神经结果是由急性缺血和炎症过程后大脑中潜在可逆的生化和生理变化引起的。在这里,我们首次证明急性 ECM 导致蛋白激酶 B(PKB 或 Akt)的激活显著减少,从而导致感染 Plasmodium berghei ANKA(PbA)的小鼠大脑中的 Akt 磷酸化减少和糖原激酶合酶(GSK3β)抑制,与未感染对照和感染非神经毒性 P. berghei NK65(PbN)的小鼠相比。尽管在 PbA 感染的小鼠中氯喹治疗后 Akt 激活恢复到对照水平,但氯化锂的添加可抑制 GSK3β 活性并刺激 Akt 激活,与用氯喹治疗的未感染对照相比,感染小鼠大脑中的 Akt 有适度但显著的激活,而不管是否添加氯化锂。此外,与单独用氯喹治疗的未感染对照相比,氯化锂可显著逆转寄生虫清除后持续存在的长期空间和视觉记忆障碍以及运动协调缺陷。氯喹治疗后,GSK3β 抑制在锂和非锂处理的 PbA 感染小鼠中均显著增加。这些数据表明,急性 ECM 与导致神经元损伤的细胞存活途径异常有关。用锂抑制 GSK3β 可减少神经元变性,并可能对 ECM 具有神经保护作用。Akt/GSK3β 信号的异常调节可能是 ECM 中观察到的长期神经后遗症的基础,并可能为 CM 的管理提供附加的治疗靶点。