Brain Research Bulletin (Oct 2024)
Dl-3-n-Butylphthalide attenuates early brain injury and delayed neurological dysfunction by regulating NLRP3 inflammasome after subarachnoid hemorrhage
Abstract
Subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) is a severe neurological event lacking of effective therapy. Early brain injury (EBI) and delayed neurological dysfunction are important cause in the poor prognosis of patients with SAH. Nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain (NOD)-like receptor pyrin domain containing 3 (NLRP3) inflammasome activation has been implicated in many inflammatory lesion pathogeneses including SAH. Dl-3-n-butylphthalide (NBP) has been reported to possess substantial anti-inflammatory properties, which is beneficial for various neurodegenerative diseases. However, the effect and molecular mechanisms of NBP on SAH have not been clearly identified. We designed this study to investigate the effect of NBP against EBI and delayed neurological dysfunction after SAH and to reveal the possible underlying mechanism. The adult mice were subjected to endovascular perforation SAH model or sham operation. Mice were randomized to sham group, SAH group, or SAH+NBP group. The EBI (short-term study) was studied at 48 h post-SAH and delayed neurological dysfunction (long-term study) at 21 days post-SAH. The results suggested that NBP evidently alleviated the EBI in mice at 48 h post-SAH, as shown by elevating neurological score, reducing brain edema, blood–brain barrier disruption, neuronal loss, and astrocyte aggregation, as well as ameliorating cerebral vasospasm. Moreover, NBP was able to improve long-term neurobehavioral functions and decrease neuronal apoptosis at 21 days after SAH. Significantly, NBP treatment also inhibited the expressions of NLRP3, ASC, caspase-1, cleaved-caspase-1, IL-1β, IL-18, GSDMD and GSDMD-N in both EBI and delayed neurological dysfunction induced by SAH. Our findings suggested that NBP treatment exerts a profound neuroprotective effect against early brain injury and delayed neurological dysfunction induced by SAH, at least partially through regulating NLRP3 inflammasome signaling pathway and its related inflammation and pyroptosis,