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Kainic Acid‐Induced Oxidative Injury Is Attenuated by Hypoxic Preconditioning

10

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30

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2005

Year

Abstract

Female Wistar rats were subjected to 380 mmHg in an altitude chamber for 15 h/day for 28 days. Hypoxic preconditioning attenuated kainic acid (KA)-induced oxidative injury, including KA-elevated lipid peroxidation and neuronal loss in rat hippocampus. Furthermore, KA-induced translocation of cytochrome c and apoptosis-inducing factor from mitochondria to cytosol was attenuated in the hypoxic rats. In addition, hypoxic preconditioning attenuated the KA-induced reduction in glutathione content and superoxide dismutase as well as KA-induced increase in glutathione peroxidase. Although local infusion of KA increased hippocampal NF-kappaB binding activity in the normoxic rat, hypoxia further enhanced KA-elevated NF-kappaB binding activity. Moreover, hypoxic preconditioning potentiated the KA-induced increase in Bcl-2 level in the lesioned hippocampus. Our data suggest that hypoxic preconditioning exerts its neuroprotection of KA-induced oxidative injury via enhancing NF-kappaB activation, upregulating the antioxidative defense system, and attenuating the apoptotic process.

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