Publication | Open Access
Esketamine ameliorates post-stroke anxiety by modulating microglial HDAC3/NF-κB/COX1 inflammatory signaling in ischemic cortex
24
Citations
32
References
2023
Year
Microglial Hdac3/nf-κb/cox1 InflammatoryHdac3 ExpressionClinical NeuroscienceSocial SciencesNeuroinflammationInflammationNeurobiology Of DiseaseStressSubcortical Ischemic DepressionBrain InjuryNeurologyNeuroimmunologyStress BiomarkersMolecular SignalingPsychoneuroimmunologyMolecular NeurosciencePsychiatryMedicineNeuropharmacologyBrain-immune InteractionNeuroprotectionPost-stroke AnxietyEsketamine AdministrationCerebral Blood FlowIschemic CortexClinical DisordersNeurophysiologyNeuroscienceBiological PsychiatryStroke
Post-stroke anxiety (PSA) is a kind of affective disorder occurring after a stroke, with anxiety as the primary clinical manifestation. PSA's mechanism is unclear, and there are few prevention and treatment measures. Our previous study found that HDAC3 could activate NF-κB signaling through mediated p65 deacetylation, which further influenced microglia activation. That implies HDAC3 may be the key mediator in ischemic stroke mice and modulates anxiety susceptibility to stress. This study established a PSA model in male C57BL/6 mice through photothrombotic stroke combined with chronic restrain stress. We focused on exploring whether esketamine administration can alleviate anxiety-like behavior and neuroinflammation, which may be associated with inhibiting HDAC3 expression and NF-κB pathway activation. The results showed that esketamine administration alleviated anxiety-like behavior in PSA mice. And the results showed that esketamine alleviated cortical microglial activation, altered microglial number, and kept morphology features. Furthermore, the results showed that the expression of HDAC3, phosphor-p65/p65, and COX1 significantly decreased in esketamine-treated PSA mice. Besides, we also found that esketamine reduced PGE2 expression, one of the primary regulators of negative emotions. Interestingly, our results indicate that esketamine reduced the perineuronal net (PNN) number in the pathological process of PSA. In conclusion, this study suggests esketamine could alleviate microglial activation, reduces inflammatory cytokine, and inhibits the expression of HDAC3 and NF-κB in the cortex of PSA mice to attenuate anxiety-like behavior. Our results provided a new potential therapeutic target for applying esketamine to PSA.
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