Neuropsychiatric Disease and Treatment (Jul 2023)

The Protective Role and Mechanism of Mild Therapeutic Hypothermia Protection on Brain Cells

  • Liang S,
  • Ti Y,
  • Li X,
  • Zhou W

Journal volume & issue
Vol. Volume 19
pp. 1625 – 1631

Abstract

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Suixin Liang,1 Yunxing Ti,2 Xiuhong Li,1 Wenjia Zhou1 1Department of CICU, Shenzhen Children’s Hospital, Shenzhen City, Guangdong Province, People’s Republic of China; 2Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Shenzhen Children’s Hospital, Shenzhen City, Guangdong Province, People’s Republic of ChinaCorrespondence: Suixin Liang, Department of CICU, Shenzhen Children’s Hospital, 7019#, Yitian Road, Futian District, Shenzhen City, Guangdong Province, 518038, People’s Republic of China, Email [email protected]: Moderate therapeutic hypothermia is protective against several cellular stressors. However, the mechanisms behind this protection are not entirely known. In the current investigation, we investigated that therapeutic hypothermia at 33°C administered following peroxide-induced oxidative stress might protect human oligodendroglioma cells using an in vitro model.Methods and Results: Tert-butyl peroxide treatment for one hour significantly increased cell apoptosis and suppressed cell viability. In the range of 50– 1000 M tert-butyl peroxide, this cell death was dose-dependent. MTT assay and cell apoptosis assay were applied to analyze cell viability/death at 24 hours after peroxide-induced stress. Therapeutic hypothermia at 33°C delivered for two hours after peroxide exposure significantly increased cell viability and suppressed cell death. Even 15 minutes after peroxide washout when delayed hypothermia was used, this protection was still apparent. Three FDA-approved antioxidants (Tempol, EUK134, and Edaravone at 100 M) were added immediately after tert-butyl peroxide, followed by hypothermia treatment. These three antioxidants greatly increased cell viability and cell apoptosis. RT-qPCR was applied to determine the effects of hypothermia treatment on the expression of caspase-3 and − 8 as well as tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α). Therapeutic hypothermia significantly downregulated these three factors.Conclusion: Overall, these findings confirmed that hypothermia and antioxidants quenching reactive oxygen species may lower mitochondrial oxidative stress and/or apoptotic pathways. Further investigation are needed to investigate the role of hypothermia in other cell models.Keywords: peroxide-induced oxidative stress, moderate therapeutic hypothermia, cell viability

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