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Journal of neurotrauma · Aug 2016
Autophagy modulation by lanthionine ketimine ethyl ester improves long-term outcome following central fluid percussion injury in the mouse.
- Kenneth Hensley, Aleksandra Poteshkina, Ming F Johnson, Pirooz Eslami, S Prasad Gabbita, Alexandar M Hristov, Kalina M Venkova-Hristova, and Marni E Harris-White.
- 1 Department of Pathology, University of Toledo Health Science Campus , Toledo, Ohio.
- J. Neurotrauma. 2016 Aug 15; 33 (16): 1501-13.
AbstractDiffuse axonal injury is recognized as a progressive and long-term consequence of traumatic brain injury. Axonal injury can have sustained negative consequences on neuronal functions such as anterograde and retrograde transport and cellular processes such as autophagy that depend on cytoarchitecture and axon integrity. These changes can lead to somatic atrophy and an inability to repair and promote plasticity. Obstruction of the autophagic process has been noted after brain injury, and rapamycin, a drug used to stimulate autophagy, has demonstrated positive effects in brain injury models. The optimization of drugs to promote beneficial autophagy without negative side effects could be used to attenuate traumatic brain injury and promote improved outcome. Lanthionine ketimine ethyl ester, a bioavailable derivative of a natural sulfur amino acid metabolite, has demonstrated effects on autophagy both in vitro and in vivo. Thirty minutes after a moderate central fluid percussion injury and throughout the survival period, lanthionine ketimine ethyl ester was administered, and mice were subsequently evaluated for learning and memory impairments and biochemical and histological changes over a 5-week period. Lanthionine ketimine ethyl ester, which we have shown previously to modulate autophagy markers and alleviate pathology and slow cognitive decline in the 3 × TgAD mouse model, spared cognition and pathology after central fluid percussion injury through a mechanism involving autophagy modulation.
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