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Authors Chen F, Su X, Lin Z, Lin Y, Yu L, Cai J, Kang D, Hu L
Received 1 May 2017
Accepted for publication 20 June 2017
Published 7 July 2017 Volume 2017:13 Pages 1771—1782
DOI https://doi.org/10.2147/NDT.S140801
Checked for plagiarism Yes
Review by Single-blind
Peer reviewers approved by Prof. Dr. Roumen Kirov
Peer reviewer comments 2
Editor who approved publication: Professor Wai Kwong Tang
Abstract: Necroptosis is
programmed cell death that has been recently proposed and reported to be
involved in several neurologic diseases. However, the role of necroptosis in
early brain injury after subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) is still unknown. The
purpose of this study was to investigate whether necroptosis was involved in
SAH-induced early brain injury, and to assess the possible neuroprotective
effect of necrostatin-1 using an endovascular perforation rat model of SAH. Our
results showed that the expression levels of necroptosis-related proteins including
RIP1, RIP3 and MLKL in the basal cortex all increased at 3 hours after SAH (P <0.05) and peaked at 48 hours
after SAH (P <0.05). However, they were
greatly reduced after treatment with necrostatin-1 (P <0.05).
Concurrently, neurologic outcomes were significantly improved after
necrostatin-1 treatment (P <0.05).
Furthermore, brain edema, blood–brain barrier disruption, necrotic cell death
and neuroinflammation were also greatly inhibited after necrostatin-1
treatment. These results indicate that necroptosis is an important mechanism of
cell death involved in the early brain injury after experimental SAH.
Necrostatin-1 perhaps can serve as a promising neuroprotective agent for SAH
treatment.
Keywords: subarachnoid
hemorrhage, necroptosis, receptor-interacting protein 1, cell death,
neuroprotection