scholarly journals Advantages of Repeated Low Dose against Single High Dose of Kainate in C57BL/6J Mouse Model of Status Epilepticus: Behavioral and Electroencephalographic Studies

PLoS ONE ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 9 (5) ◽  
pp. e96622 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karen Tse ◽  
Sreekanth Puttachary ◽  
Edward Beamer ◽  
Graeme J. Sills ◽  
Thimmasettappa Thippeswamy
Author(s):  
Gianpaolo Papaccio ◽  
Francesco Aurelio Pisanti ◽  
Michael V.G. Latronico ◽  
Eduardo Ammendola ◽  
Michela Galdieri

2015 ◽  
Vol 309 (3) ◽  
pp. R223-R234 ◽  
Author(s):  
Asada Leelahavanichkul ◽  
Poorichaya Somparn ◽  
Tanabodee Bootprapan ◽  
Hongbin Tu ◽  
Pattarin Tangtanatakul ◽  
...  

Amphotericin B (Ampho B) is a fungicidal drug that causes cell wall injury. Pharmacological ascorbate induces the extracellular prooxidants, which might enter the Ampho B-induced cell wall porosity and act synergistically. We tested low-dose Ampho B with a short course of pharmacological ascorbate using a mouse model of sepsis preconditioned with an injection of Candida albicans 6 h prior to cecal ligation and puncture (CLP). In this model, candidemia reappeared as early as 6 h after CLP with a predictably high mortality rate. This characteristic mimics sepsis in the phase of immunosuppression in patients. Using the model, at 12- and 18-h post-CLP, we administered isotonic (pH neutralized) pharmacological ascorbate intravenously with low-dose Ampho B or sodium deoxycholate, vehicle-controlled, administered IP. The survival rate of low-dose Ampho B plus ascorbate was 53%, compared with <11% for low-dose Ampho B or high-dose Ampho B alone. In addition, a beneficial effect was demonstrated in terms of kidney damage, liver injury, spleen histopathology, and serum markers at 24 h after CLP. Kidney injury was less severe in low-dose Ampho B plus ascorbate combination therapy due to less severe sepsis. Moreover, ascorbate enhanced the effectiveness of phagocytosis against C. albicans in human phagocytic cells. Taken together, the data indicate that the new mouse model simulates sepsis-induced immunosuppression and that the combination of pharmacological ascorbate with an antifungal drug is a potentially effective treatment that may reduce nephrotoxicity, and perhaps also increase fungicidal activity in patients with systemic candidiasis caused by Candida albicans.


2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mahmut Apaydin ◽  
Asli Gencay Can ◽  
Seyfullah Kan ◽  
Selvihan Beysel ◽  
Taner Demirci ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nzola De Magalhães ◽  

AbstractThe purpose of this study was to determine if therapeutic efficacy of a Cetuximab based near-infrared (NIR) targeted photo therapy (TPT) was dependent on light delivery strategies. We examined the cytotoxic effects of TPT in a pancreatic cancer mouse model, when administered to tumors interstitially and superficially.A subcutaneous mouse model of pancreatic cancer using BXPC-3 -GFP cells was established in male athymic (nu/nu) mice. The mice received intravenous (IV) injection of Cetuximab-IR700DX, 24 hours prior to near-infrared light irradiation. Interstitial illumination was administered at a 400mW/cm fixed power output, at a light dose of 100 J/cm to half the mice and at 300 J/cm to the remaining mice. Superficial illumination was administered at a 150mw/cm2 fixed power density at a dose of 50 J/cm2 to half the mice, and at 250 J/cm2 to the other half. Cellular damage and decrease in cell viability was determined by the decrease in GFP fluorescence intensity levels in whole animal images and in relative intensity measurements.Interstitially administered TPT resulted in greater long-term permanent damage (72 hours post treatment) to tumor cells (0% recovery at low dose, and 11% recovery at high dose) compared to superficially administered TPT (1% recovery at low dose, and 44% recovery at high dose). While these results demonstrated that near-infrared targeted photo therapy efficacy was dependent on the type of light delivery strategy, overall, both superficial and interstitial Cet-IR700DX based near-infrared targeted photo therapy can effect significant long-term damage (less signal recovery) to pancreatic cancer cells in vivo at lower doses regimens, compared to higher dose regimens (higher signal recovery).


2013 ◽  
Vol 180 (4) ◽  
pp. 376 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. D. Lawrence ◽  
R. J. Ormsby ◽  
B. J. Blyth ◽  
E. Bezak ◽  
G. England ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bijie Yang ◽  
Haobiao Wang ◽  
Yuanyuan Liu ◽  
Feifei Xiao ◽  
Mei Kuang ◽  
...  

Abstract BackgroundThe Cre-loxP system is widely applied for conditional knockout mice, commonly used to study the function of specific genes. Although some different promoters drive Cre expression, the poly(I: C)-inducible Mx1-Cre is the most commonly used to delete the target gene in experimental hematology. However, the optimal induction knockout condition for Mx1-Cre/ Cre-loxP mice using the Poly(I:C)-inducible Cre-loxP conditional system remains unclear. Here, we present two different components and three injection protocols of poly(I: C) to find the optimized condition. ResultsThe results showed that the better knockout efficiency of Cre-loxP in mice injected with pure poly(I: C) has than those injected with poly(I: C) with some components. From the perspective of lethal genes (Brg1), data showed that mice injected with a single high dose (500 µg) of pure Poly (I:C) had a lower knockout rate. For mice injected media-dose (10µg/g) poly(I: C) triple, which induced a high knockout rate, but the mortality rate was still high. Importantly, the mice injected low-dose (6µg/g) poly(I: C) triple, both the knockout rate and survival rate of mice was high. Similarly, the knockout rate of non-lethal mice injected with media-dose (10µg/g) or low-dose (6μg/g) poly(I: C) triple was very high, but injected with a single high dose (500 µg) of pure poly(I: C) had a low knockout rate. ConclusionOur studies provided the optimized condition for using poly(I: C)-inducible effective knockout and maintaining the survival rate for the Cre-loxP mice, which might be applied in other knockout mice for this system to ensure both the gene knockout and the mice survival.


2017 ◽  
Vol 45 (03) ◽  
pp. 557-573 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jin Wang ◽  
Ying Li ◽  
Wei-Hua Huang ◽  
Xiang-Chang Zeng ◽  
Xiao-Hui Li ◽  
...  

Abstract: Eucommia ulmoides Oliv. is a famous traditional Chinese medicine which exhibits anti-oxidative stress ability and neuro-protective effects. Aucubin is the predominant component of Eucommia ulmoides Oliv. Our present study is intended to investigate aucubin’s potential protective effects on neurons against epilepsy in the hippocampus by establishing the lithium-pilocarpine induced status epilepticus (SE) rat model in vivo. Aucubin (at a low dose and a high dose of 5[Formula: see text]mg/kg and 10[Formula: see text]mg/kg, respectively) was administered through gavage for two weeks before lithium-pilocarpine injection. Rats were sacrificed at 4, 24 and 72[Formula: see text]h after SE induction. Pretreatment with both low-dose and high-dose aucubin significantly reduced the number of death neurons ([Formula: see text]) and increased the number of surviving neurons ([Formula: see text]) in DG, Hilus, CA1 and CA3 hippocampal regions post SE. Meanwhile, it significantly inhibited necroptosis proteins (MLKL and RIP-1) ([Formula: see text] or [Formula: see text]) and enhanced autophagy protein (Beclin-1 and LC3BII/LC3BI) prevalence in the hippocampus ([Formula: see text] or [Formula: see text]). In conclusion, aucubin appeared to ameliorate damages in lithium-pilocarpine induced SE in hippocampus, reduce the number of apoptotic neurons, and increased the number of survival neurons by inducing autophagy and inhibiting necroptosis. These original findings might provide an important basis for the further investigation of the therapeutic role of aucubin in treatment or prevention of epilepsy-related neuronal damages.


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