Thymelaea lythroides extract attenuates microglial activation and depressive-like behavior in LPS-induced inflammation in adult male rats.
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Resum
Thymelaea lythroides extract is widely used as a traditional folk medicine in Morocco, especially for the treatment of diabetes, rheumatism and Inflammatory disease. The aim of the study is to evaluate the possible effect of methanolic extract of Thymelaea lythroides in repressing the inflammatory responses and long-lasting depression-like behavior associated with neuroinflammation in adult rats after neonatal LPS exposure. Male rat pups were treated systemically with either LPS (250??g/kg) or vehicle (phosphate buffer saline) on postnatal day 14. Six hours later, the LPS groups were assigned to intraperitoneal (ip) injection of Minocycline (50?mg/kg) or Thymelaea lythroides (200?mg/kg). Thereafter, in adulthood (postnatal days 90-97), the spontaneous locomotor activity and depression-like behavior were assessed successively in open field and forced swim tests. The levels of proinflammatory cytokines, oxidative damage, and activation of microglia were determined in the hippocampus (HP) of male rats on (PND90-97). Our results showed that open field hypoactivity and increased immobility period in LPS-induced adult rats were normalized on treatment with Thymelaea lythroides and minocycline. Both treatments attenuate the overactivated microglial cells in the CA1 and CA3 of hippocampus (HP) and significantly reduced the oxidative-nitrosative stress markers and cytokine (TNF ?) production in the HP. Thymelaea lythroides seems to have similar neuroprotective effects to Minocycline, and such protection may be due to: reduction of oxidative stress, upregulation of inflammatory mediators production, antidepressant behavior which all are associated with neuroinflammation.