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Altered Regulation of Akt Signaling with Murine Cerebral Malaria, Effects on Long-Term Neuro-Cognitive Function, Restoration with Lithium Treatment

Neurological and cognitive impairment persist in more than 20% of cerebral malaria (CM) patients long after successful anti-parasitic treatment. We recently reported that long term memory and motor coordination deficits are also present in our experimental cerebral malaria model (ECM). We also docum...

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Autores principales: Dai, Minxian, Freeman, Brandi, Shikani, Henry J., Bruno, Fernando Pereira, Collado, J. Elias, Macias, Rolando, Reznik, Sandra E., Davies, Peter, Spray, David Conover, Tanowitz, Herbert Bernard, Weiss, Louis Martin, Desruisseaux, Mahalia Sabrina
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3474787/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23082110
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0044117
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author Dai, Minxian
Freeman, Brandi
Shikani, Henry J.
Bruno, Fernando Pereira
Collado, J. Elias
Macias, Rolando
Reznik, Sandra E.
Davies, Peter
Spray, David Conover
Tanowitz, Herbert Bernard
Weiss, Louis Martin
Desruisseaux, Mahalia Sabrina
author_facet Dai, Minxian
Freeman, Brandi
Shikani, Henry J.
Bruno, Fernando Pereira
Collado, J. Elias
Macias, Rolando
Reznik, Sandra E.
Davies, Peter
Spray, David Conover
Tanowitz, Herbert Bernard
Weiss, Louis Martin
Desruisseaux, Mahalia Sabrina
author_sort Dai, Minxian
collection PubMed
description Neurological and cognitive impairment persist in more than 20% of cerebral malaria (CM) patients long after successful anti-parasitic treatment. We recently reported that long term memory and motor coordination deficits are also present in our experimental cerebral malaria model (ECM). We also documented, in a murine model, a lack of obvious pathology or inflammation after parasite elimination, suggesting that the long-term negative neurological outcomes result from potentially reversible biochemical and physiological changes in brains of ECM mice, subsequent to acute ischemic and inflammatory processes. Here, we demonstrate for the first time that acute ECM results in significantly reduced activation of protein kinase B (PKB or Akt) leading to decreased Akt phosphorylation and inhibition of the glycogen kinase synthase (GSK3β) in the brains of mice infected with Plasmodium berghei ANKA (PbA) compared to uninfected controls and to mice infected with the non-neurotrophic P. berghei NK65 (PbN). Though Akt activation improved to control levels after chloroquine treatment in PbA-infected mice, the addition of lithium chloride, a compound which inhibits GSK3β activity and stimulates Akt activation, induced a modest, but significant activation of Akt in the brains of infected mice when compared to uninfected controls treated with chloroquine with and without lithium. In addition, lithium significantly reversed the long-term spatial and visual memory impairment as well as the motor coordination deficits which persisted after successful anti-parasitic treatment. GSK3β inhibition was significantly increased after chloroquine treatment, both in lithium and non-lithium treated PbA-infected mice. These data indicate that acute ECM is associated with abnormalities in cell survival pathways that result in neuronal damage. Regulation of Akt/GSK3β with lithium reduces neuronal degeneration and may have neuroprotective effects in ECM. Aberrant regulation of Akt/GSK3β signaling likely underlies long-term neurological sequelae observed in ECM and may yield adjunctive therapeutic targets for the management of CM.
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spelling pubmed-34747872012-10-18 Altered Regulation of Akt Signaling with Murine Cerebral Malaria, Effects on Long-Term Neuro-Cognitive Function, Restoration with Lithium Treatment Dai, Minxian Freeman, Brandi Shikani, Henry J. Bruno, Fernando Pereira Collado, J. Elias Macias, Rolando Reznik, Sandra E. Davies, Peter Spray, David Conover Tanowitz, Herbert Bernard Weiss, Louis Martin Desruisseaux, Mahalia Sabrina PLoS One Research Article Neurological and cognitive impairment persist in more than 20% of cerebral malaria (CM) patients long after successful anti-parasitic treatment. We recently reported that long term memory and motor coordination deficits are also present in our experimental cerebral malaria model (ECM). We also documented, in a murine model, a lack of obvious pathology or inflammation after parasite elimination, suggesting that the long-term negative neurological outcomes result from potentially reversible biochemical and physiological changes in brains of ECM mice, subsequent to acute ischemic and inflammatory processes. Here, we demonstrate for the first time that acute ECM results in significantly reduced activation of protein kinase B (PKB or Akt) leading to decreased Akt phosphorylation and inhibition of the glycogen kinase synthase (GSK3β) in the brains of mice infected with Plasmodium berghei ANKA (PbA) compared to uninfected controls and to mice infected with the non-neurotrophic P. berghei NK65 (PbN). Though Akt activation improved to control levels after chloroquine treatment in PbA-infected mice, the addition of lithium chloride, a compound which inhibits GSK3β activity and stimulates Akt activation, induced a modest, but significant activation of Akt in the brains of infected mice when compared to uninfected controls treated with chloroquine with and without lithium. In addition, lithium significantly reversed the long-term spatial and visual memory impairment as well as the motor coordination deficits which persisted after successful anti-parasitic treatment. GSK3β inhibition was significantly increased after chloroquine treatment, both in lithium and non-lithium treated PbA-infected mice. These data indicate that acute ECM is associated with abnormalities in cell survival pathways that result in neuronal damage. Regulation of Akt/GSK3β with lithium reduces neuronal degeneration and may have neuroprotective effects in ECM. Aberrant regulation of Akt/GSK3β signaling likely underlies long-term neurological sequelae observed in ECM and may yield adjunctive therapeutic targets for the management of CM. Public Library of Science 2012-10-17 /pmc/articles/PMC3474787/ /pubmed/23082110 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0044117 Text en © 2012 Dai et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Dai, Minxian
Freeman, Brandi
Shikani, Henry J.
Bruno, Fernando Pereira
Collado, J. Elias
Macias, Rolando
Reznik, Sandra E.
Davies, Peter
Spray, David Conover
Tanowitz, Herbert Bernard
Weiss, Louis Martin
Desruisseaux, Mahalia Sabrina
Altered Regulation of Akt Signaling with Murine Cerebral Malaria, Effects on Long-Term Neuro-Cognitive Function, Restoration with Lithium Treatment
title Altered Regulation of Akt Signaling with Murine Cerebral Malaria, Effects on Long-Term Neuro-Cognitive Function, Restoration with Lithium Treatment
title_full Altered Regulation of Akt Signaling with Murine Cerebral Malaria, Effects on Long-Term Neuro-Cognitive Function, Restoration with Lithium Treatment
title_fullStr Altered Regulation of Akt Signaling with Murine Cerebral Malaria, Effects on Long-Term Neuro-Cognitive Function, Restoration with Lithium Treatment
title_full_unstemmed Altered Regulation of Akt Signaling with Murine Cerebral Malaria, Effects on Long-Term Neuro-Cognitive Function, Restoration with Lithium Treatment
title_short Altered Regulation of Akt Signaling with Murine Cerebral Malaria, Effects on Long-Term Neuro-Cognitive Function, Restoration with Lithium Treatment
title_sort altered regulation of akt signaling with murine cerebral malaria, effects on long-term neuro-cognitive function, restoration with lithium treatment
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3474787/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23082110
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0044117
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