Iranian Journal of Basic Medical Sciences (Jun 2016)

Effect of ischemic preconditioning on the expression of c-myb in the CA1 region of the gerbil hippocampus after ischemia/reperfusion injury

  • Hui Young Lee,
  • Hyun-Jin Tae,
  • Geum-Sil Cho,
  • In Hye Kim,
  • Jeong Hwi Cho,
  • Joon Ha Park,
  • Ji Hyeon Ahn,
  • Bai Hui Chen,
  • Bich-Na Shin,
  • Moo-Ho Won,
  • Chan Woo Park,
  • Jun Hwi Cho,
  • Jeong Yeol Seo,
  • Jae-Chul Lee

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 6
pp. 624 – 631

Abstract

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Objective(s): In the present study, we investigated the effect of ischemic preconditioning (IPC) on c-myb immunoreactivity as well as neuronal damage/death after a subsequent lethal transient ischemia in gerbils. Materials and Methods: IPC was subjected to a 2 min sublethal ischemia and a lethal transient ischemia was given 5 min transient ischemia. The animals in all of the groups were given recovery times of 1 day, 2 days and 5 days and we examined change in c-myb immunoreactivity as well as neuronal damage/death in the hippocampus induced by a lethal transient ischemia. Results:A lethal transient ischemia induced a significant loss of cells in the stratum pyramidale (SP) of the hippocampal CA1 region at 5 days post-ischemia, and this insult showed that c-myb immunoreactivity in cells of the SP of the CA1 region was significantly decreased at 2 days post-ischemia and disappeared at 5 days post-ischemia. However, IPC effectively prevented the neuronal loss in the SP and showed that c-myb immunoreactivity was constitutively maintained in the SP after a lethal transient ischemia. Conclusion: Our results show that a lethal transient ischemia significantly decreased c-myb immunoreactivity in the SP of the CA1 region and that IPC well preserved c-myb immunoreactivity in the SP of the CA1 region. We suggest that the maintenance of c-myb might be related with IPC-mediated neuroprotection after a lethal ischemic insult.

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