Heliyon (Jun 2023)
Folicitin abrogates scopolamine induced oxidative stress, hyperlipidemia mediated neuronal synapse and memory dysfunction in mice
Abstract
No effective drug treatment is available for Alzheimer disease, thus the need arise to develop efficient drugs for its treatment. Natural products have pronounced capability in treating Alzheimer disease therefore current study aimed to evaluate the neuro-protective capability of folicitin against scopolamine-induced Alzheimer disease neuropathology in mice. Experimental mice were divided into four groups i.e. control (single dose of 250 μL saline), scopolamine-administered group (1 mg/kg administered for three weeks), scopolamine plus folicitin-administered group (scopolamine 1 mg/kg administration for three weeks followed by folicitin administration for last two weeks) and folicitin-administered group (20 mg/kg administered for 5 alternate days). Results of behavioral tests and Western blot indicated that folicitin has the capability of recovering the memory against scopolamine-induced memory impairment by reducing the oxidative stress through up-regulating the endogenous antioxidant system like nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor and Heme oxygenase-1 while prohibiting phosphorylated c-Jun N-terminal kinase. Similarly, folicitin also improved the synaptic dysfunction by up-regulating SYP and PSD95. Scopolamine-induced hyperglycemia and hyperlipidemia were abolished by folicitin as evidenced through random blood glucose test, glucose tolerance test and lipid profile test. All these results revealed that folicitin being a potent anti-oxidant is capable of improving synaptic dysfunction and reducing oxidative stress through Nrf-2/HO-1 pathway, thus plays a key role in treating Alzheimer disease as well as possess hyperglycemic and hyperlipidemic effect. Furthermore, a detailed study is suggested.