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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Insight into the molecular sex dimorphism of ischaemic stroke in rat cerebral cortex: Focus on neuroglobin, sex steroids and autophagy
Germán TorregrosaEstefania Acaz-fonsecaEstefania Acaz-fonsecaLuis M. Garcia-seguraLuis M. Garcia-seguraAlicia Aliena-valeroMaría Castelló-ruizJuan B. SalomMaría C. Burguetesubject
Malemedicine.medical_specialtysteroidogenesisNeuroprotectionBrain IschemiaRats Sprague-Dawley03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineInternal medicineCortex (anatomy)sex steroid signallingmedicineAutophagyAnimalssex dimorphismAromataseStroke030304 developmental biologyIschemic StrokeCerebral Cortex0303 health sciencesSex Characteristicsischaemic strokebiologybusiness.industryGeneral NeuroscienceInfarction Middle Cerebral Arterymedicine.diseaseRatsAndrogen receptorStrokeDisease Models AnimalneuroglobinEndocrinologymedicine.anatomical_structureSex steroidCerebral cortexNeuroglobinbiology.proteinFemaleSteroidsbusiness030217 neurology & neurosurgerydescription
Including sex is of paramount importance in preclinical and clinical stroke researches, and molecular studies dealing in depth with sex differences in stroke pathophysiology are needed. To gain insight into the molecular sex dimorphism of ischaemic stroke in rat cerebral cortex, male and female adult rats were subjected to transient middle cerebral artery occlusion. The expression of neuroglobin (Ngb) and other functionally related molecules involved in sex steroid signalling (oestrogen and androgen receptors), steroidogenesis (StAR, TSPO and aromatase) and autophagic activity (LC3B-II/LC3B-I ratio, UCP2 and HIF-1 alpha) was assessed in the ipsilateral ischaemic and contralateral non-ischaemic hemispheres. An increased expression of Ngb was detected in the injured female cerebral cortex. In contrast, increased expression of oestrogen receptor alpha, GPER, StAR, TSPO and UCP2, and decreased androgen receptor expression were detected in the injured male cortex. In both sexes, the ischaemic insult induced an upregulation of LC3B-II/-I ratio, indicative of increased autophagy. Therefore, the cerebral cortex activates both sex-specific and common molecular responses with neuroprotective potential after ischaemia-reperfusion, which globally results in similar stroke outcome in both sexes. Nonetheless, these different potential molecular targets should be taken into account when neuroprotective drugs aiming to reduce brain damage in ischaemic stroke are investigated.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2020-01-01 |