Hui Dong, Hui Zhang, Lei Cai, Quanyi Ye, Heping Wang, Bo Liu, Wenhu Zhang, Junxin Li
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a major cause of neurological dysfunction and disability. This study aimed to investigate the transcriptomic changes and the functional consequences in TBI, focusing on the interplay between inflammation and mitochondrial impairment. Brain tissue samples from TBI patients and healthy controls were subjected to RNA-sequencing analysis. Mouse hippocampal HT-22 cells were treated with inflammatory cytokine and the PGC-1α activator ZLN005. Mitochondrial function, oxidative stress, and apoptosis were assessed using Seahorse respirometry, electron microscopy, flow cytometry, and molecular assays. A TBI mouse model was established to evaluate the therapeutic effects of ZLN005. Transcriptome profiling revealed downregulation of mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) genes, particularly those encoded by the mitochondrial genome, along with enrichment of neurodegenerative pathways in TBI patients. Concomitantly, pro-inflammatory signaling pathways showed upregulation. In vitro studies demonstrated that inflammatory cytokine TNF-α treatment impaired mitochondrial respiration, induced oxidative stress and apoptosis in HT-22 cells, which could be rescued by ZLN005-mediated PGC-1α activation and restoration of OXPHOS gene expression. Administration of ZLN005 in the TBI mouse model alleviated neuronal cell death, preserved mitochondrial integrity, normalized OXPHOS gene levels in brain tissues, and improved cognitive function. This study uncovers a mechanistic link between inflammation-induced downregulation of mitochondrial OXPHOS genes and neuronal damage in TBI. Targeting this pathway by activating PGC-1α represents a potential therapeutic strategy for TBI.
期刊介绍:
Biochemical Genetics welcomes original manuscripts that address and test clear scientific hypotheses, are directed to a broad scientific audience, and clearly contribute to the advancement of the field through the use of sound sampling or experimental design, reliable analytical methodologies and robust statistical analyses.
Although studies focusing on particular regions and target organisms are welcome, it is not the journal’s goal to publish essentially descriptive studies that provide results with narrow applicability, or are based on very small samples or pseudoreplication.
Rather, Biochemical Genetics welcomes review articles that go beyond summarizing previous publications and create added value through the systematic analysis and critique of the current state of knowledge or by conducting meta-analyses.
Methodological articles are also within the scope of Biological Genetics, particularly when new laboratory techniques or computational approaches are fully described and thoroughly compared with the existing benchmark methods.
Biochemical Genetics welcomes articles on the following topics: Genomics; Proteomics; Population genetics; Phylogenetics; Metagenomics; Microbial genetics; Genetics and evolution of wild and cultivated plants; Animal genetics and evolution; Human genetics and evolution; Genetic disorders; Genetic markers of diseases; Gene technology and therapy; Experimental and analytical methods; Statistical and computational methods.