Protective Effects of PGC-1α Activators on Ischemic Stroke in a Rat Model of Photochemically Induced Thrombosis.
Shakova. Fatima M FM; Kirova. Yuliya I YI; Silachev. Denis N DN; Romanova. Galina A GA; Morozov. Sergey G SG
Key Findings
- Ischemic injury in rats sharply lowered PGC‑1α expression and reduced neuron numbers in the affected brain area.
- Intranasal Semax (25 µg/kg daily for 7 days) preserved neuron counts and maintained PGC‑1α levels in surviving neurons.
- Semax promoted the movement of PGC‑1α into the cell nucleus and increased downstream proteins linked to mitochondrial creation, new blood vessel growth, and synapse formation.
Practical Outcomes
- The study suggests that intranasal Semax could boost brain resilience by activating PGC‑1α pathways, but the evidence is limited to rats and a specific stroke model. For biohackers, it signals a potential neuroprotective angle worth watching, yet there is no ready‑to‑use human dosing protocol or safety data, so further research is needed before practical application.
Summary
In a rat study, giving the peptide Semax through the nose helped protect brain cells after a stroke-like injury. It kept the levels of a protein called PGC‑1α (which supports mitochondria, blood vessels, and synapses) higher than in untreated rats, and more neurons survived.
Abstract
The pharmacological induction and activation of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma coactivator 1 alpha (PGC-1α), a key regulator of ischemic brain tolerance, is a promising direction in neuroprotective therapy. Pharmacological agents with known abilities to modulate cerebral PGC-1α are scarce. This study focused on the potential PGC-1α-modulating activity of Mexidol (2-ethyl-6-methyl-3-hydroxypyridine succinate) and Semax (ACTH<sub>(4-7)</sub> analog) in a rat model of photochemical-induced thrombosis (PT) in the prefrontal cortex. Mexidol (100 mg/kg) was administered intraperitoneally, and Semax (25 μg/kg) was administered intranasally, for 7 days each. The expression of PGC-1α and PGC-1α-dependent protein markers of mitochondriogenesis, angiogenesis, and synaptogenesis was measured in the penumbra via immunoblotting at Days 1, 3, 7, and 21 after PT. The nuclear content of PGC-1α was measured immunohistochemically. The suppression of PGC-1α expression was observed in the penumbra from 24 h to 21 days following PT and reflected decreases in both the number of neurons and PGC-1α expression in individual neurons. Administration of Mexidol or Semax was associated with preservation of the neuron number and neuronal expression of PGC-1α, stimulation of the nuclear translocation of PGC-1α, and increased contents of protein markers for PGC-1α activation. This study opens new prospects for the pharmacological modulation of PGC-1α in the ischemic brain.
Study Information
pubmed
2021
2021-03-04T00:00:00.000Z
10.3390/brainsci11030325
7
108