Brain Protein Expression Profile Confirms the Protective Effect of the ACTHPGP Peptide (Semax) in a Rat Model of Cerebral Ischemia-Reperfusion. | Pepdox
Brain Protein Expression Profile Confirms the Protective Effect of the ACTHPGP Peptide (Semax) in a Rat Model of Cerebral Ischemia-Reperfusion.
International journal of molecular sciences2021PMID: 34201112
Semax was shown to alter the levels of key proteins involved in inflammation and cell death in rat brains after ischemic stroke. Specifically, it increased levels of a recovery-associated protein (CREB) in the damaged area while reducing proteins linked to inflammation and cell death (MMP-9, c-Fos, and JNK) in surrounding tissue. These protein-level findings align with earlier gene expression data and provide more direct evidence of how Semax achieves its neuroprotective effects.
Abstract
The Semax (Met-Glu-His-Phe-Pro-Gly-Pro) peptide is a synthetic melanocortin derivative that is used in the treatment of ischemic stroke. Previously, studies of the molecular mechanisms underlying the actions of Semax using models of cerebral ischemia in rats showed that the peptide enhanced the transcription of neurotrophins and their receptors and modulated the expression of genes involved in the immune response. A genome-wide RNA-Seq analysis revealed that, in the rat transient middle cerebral artery occlusion (tMCAO) model, Semax suppressed the expression of inflammatory genes and activated the expression of neurotransmitter genes. Here, we aimed to evaluate the effect of Semax in this model via the brain expression profiling of key proteins involved in inflammation and cell death processes (MMP-9, c-Fos, and JNK), as well as neuroprotection and recovery (CREB) in stroke. At 24 h after tMCAO, we observed the upregulation of active CREB in subcortical structures, including the focus of the ischemic damage; downregulation of MMP-9 and c-Fos in the adjacent frontoparietal cortex; and downregulation of active JNK in both tissues under the action of Semax. Moreover, a regulatory network was constructed. In conclusion, the suppression of inflammatory and cell death processes and the activation of recovery may contribute to the neuroprotective action of Semax at both the transcriptome and protein levels.
Authors
Sudarkina, Olga Yu; Filippenkov, Ivan B; Stavchansky, Vasily V; Denisova, Alina E; Yuzhakov, Vadim V; Sevan'kaeva, Larisa E; Valieva, Liya V; Remizova, Julia A; Dmitrieva, Veronika G; Gubsky, Leonid V; Myasoedov, Nikolai F; Limborska, Svetlana A; Dergunova, Lyudmila V
Keywords
ACTH(4–7)PGP (Semax)gene and protein expression profileimmunodetectionischemic strokereal-time RT-PCRspreading depressiontMCAO