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Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery 2020-Aug

Benefits of progesterone on brain immaturity and white matter injury induced by chronic hypoxia in neonatal rats

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Gang Liu
Yichen Yan
Bowen Shi
Junrong Huang
Hongwei Mu
Cong Li
Huiwen Chen
Zhongqun Zhu

Mots clés

Abstrait

Objectives: This study aims to evaluate the protective effects of progesterone on white matter injury and brain immaturity in neonatal rats with chronic hypoxia.

Methods: Three-day old Sprague-Dawley rats were randomly divided into 3 groups: (1) control (n = 48), rats were exposed to normoxia (fraction of inspired oxygen: 21% ± 0%); (2) chronic hypoxia (n = 48), rats were exposed to hypoxia (fraction of inspired oxygen: 10.5% ± 1.0%); and (3) progesterone (n = 48), rats were exposed to hypoxia and administrated with progesterone (8 mg/kg/d). Hematoxylin-eosin staining, immunohistochemistry, real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction, and Western blot analyses were compared on postnatal day 14 in different groups. Motor skill and coordination abilities of rats were assessed via rotation experiments.

Results: Increased brain weights (P < .05), narrowed ventricular sizes (P < .01), and rotarod experiment scores (P < .01) were better in the progesterone group than in the chronic hypoxia group. The number of mature oligodendrocytes and myelin basic protein expression increased in the progesterone group compared with the chronic hypoxia group (P < .01). The polarization of M1 microglia cells in the corpus callosum of chronic hypoxia-induced hypomyelination rats was significantly increased, whereas there were fewer M2 microglia cells. Conversely, progesterone therapy had an opposite effect and caused an increase in M2 microglia polarization versus a reduction in M1 microglia cells.

Conclusions: Progesterone could prevent white matter injury and improve brain maturation in a neonatal hypoxic rat model; this may be associated with inducing a switch from M1 to M2 in microglia.

Keywords: congenital heart defects; microglia; neuroprotection; progesterone; white matter injury.

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