Title of article :
Anticonvulsant effect of acute curcumin nanoparticle on pentylenetetrazole-induced seizuresin mice: non-involvement of JNK restoration
Author/Authors :
Moezi ، Leila Department of Pharmacology - Nanobiology and Nanomedicine Research Centre, Medical School - Shiraz University of Medical sciences , Ashjazadeh ، Nahid Department of Neurology - Clinical Neurology Research Center - Shiraz University of Medical Sciences , Rezapanah ، Shirin Department of Neurology - Clinical Neurology Research Center - Shiraz University of Medical Sciences , Pirsalami ، Fatema Department of Pharmacology - Medical School - Shiraz University of Medical Sciences , Esmaeili ، Zahra Nanobiology and Nanomedicine Research Centre, Shiraz Neuroscience Research Centre - Shiraz University of Medical sciences , SoukhakLari ، Roksana Shiraz Neuroscience Research Centre, Students Research Committee, School of Medicine - Shiraz University of Medical sciences , Moosavi ، Maryam Nanobiology and Nanomedicine Research Centre - Shiraz University of Medical sciences
From page :
36
To page :
46
Abstract :
Introduction: Although several animal studies have indicated the antiepileptic effect for curcumin, there are reports stating the null antiepileptic effect of this substance. This inconsistency might be due to the low bioavailability of curcumin. Therefore, the current study aimed to assess the effect of oral bovine serum albumin (BSA)-based nanocurcumin on seizure caused by pentylenetetrazol (PTZ) in mice. Furthermore, due to the suggested involvement of JNK signaling in seizure pathology, the hippocampal pattern of JNK phosphorylation (activation) was evaluated. Methods: BSA based nanocurcumin was administered at doses of 50 and 100mg/kg oral gavage to male NMRI mice, one hour before PTZ administration. Intravenous PTZ paradigm was used to determine the threshold dose of PTZ to induce clonic seizures, while the intraperitoneal PTZ paradigm was applied to evaluate the latency for appearance of generalized clonus. Upon completion of intraperitoneal PTZ paradigm experiments, the hippocampi were removed and Western blot analysis was performed to determine the phosphorylated and total forms of JNK. Results: The results indicated that BSA-based nanocurcumin at the doses of 50 and 100mg/kg could significantly increase the threshold and latency of clonic seizure, which was a significant superior effect compared to natural curcumin. PTZ significantly increased the level of hippocampal JNK phosphorylation, but pretreatment of nanocurcumin did not modify this effect. Conclusion: The present study shows that converting curcumin to BSA-based nanocurcumin can increase its antiepileptic effect. Furthermore, the antiepileptic effect of nanocurcumin was not associated with a modification in PTZ-induced hippocampal JNK hyper activation.
Keywords :
Curcumin , Nanoparticle , Seizure , Hippocampus , JNK , Pentylenetetrazol
Journal title :
Physiology and Pharmacology
Journal title :
Physiology and Pharmacology
Record number :
2697463
Link To Document :
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