Inhalation of hydrogen gas mitigates sevoflurane‐induced neuronal apoptosis in the neonatal cortex and is associated with changes in protein phosphorylation

Author:

Iketani Masumi1ORCID,Hatomi Mai12,Fujita Yasunori1ORCID,Watanabe Nobuhiro3ORCID,Ito Masafumi1,Kawaguchi Hideo2ORCID,Ohsawa Ikuroh1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Biological Process of Aging Tokyo Metropolitan Institute for Geriatrics and Gerontology Tokyo Japan

2. Department of Life Sciences Toyo University Asaka Japan

3. Autonomic Neuroscience Tokyo Metropolitan Institute for Geriatrics and Gerontology Tokyo Japan

Abstract

AbstractInhalation of hydrogen (H2) gas is therapeutically effective for cerebrovascular diseases, neurodegenerative disorders, and neonatal brain disorders including pathologies induced by anesthetic gases. To understand the mechanisms underlying the protective effects of H2 on the brain, we investigated the molecular signals affected by H2 in sevoflurane‐induced neuronal cell death. We confirmed that neural progenitor cells are susceptible to sevoflurane and undergo apoptosis in the retrosplenial cortex of neonatal mice. Co‐administration of 1–8% H2 gas for 3 h to sevoflurane‐exposed pups suppressed elevated caspase‐3‐mediated apoptotic cell death and concomitantly decreased c‐Jun phosphorylation and activation of the c‐Jun pathway, all of which are induced by oxidative stress. Anesthesia‐induced increases in lipid peroxidation and oxidative DNA damage were alleviated by H2 inhalation. Phosphoproteome analysis revealed enriched clusters of differentially phosphorylated proteins in the sevoflurane‐exposed neonatal brain that included proteins involved in neuronal development and synaptic signaling. H2 inhalation modified cellular transport pathways that depend on hyperphosphorylated proteins including microtubule‐associated protein family. These modifications may be involved in the protective mechanisms of H2 against sevoflurane‐induced neuronal cell death.image

Funder

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Publisher

Wiley

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