Preconditioning using mild repetitive hypobaric hypoxia is known to increase a tolerance of brain neurons to severe hypoxia and other injurious exposures. In the present study, the effects of mild hypoxic preconditioning on the expression of transcription factors NF-jB and phosphorylated CREB (pCREB) has been studied in the neocortex of rats exposed to severe hypobaric hypoxia. As revealed by quantitative immunocytochemistry, the injurious severe hypobaric hypoxia (180 Torr, 3 h) remarkably reduced the neocortical levels of pCREB and NF-jB. The three-trial hypoxic preconditioning (360 Torr, 2 h, 3 days) induced persistent up-regulation of pCREB and NF-jB expression in the neocortex of rats 3-24 h following the severe hypoxia. In addition, the preconditioning alone which was not followed by the severe hypoxia, considerably increased neocortical pCREB and NF-jB levels. The findings suggest a role for transcription factors cAMP response element-binding protein and NF-jB in the neuroprotective mechanisms activated by the hypoxic preconditioning.
The impact of severe hypoxia and preconditioning on the expression of the mitochondrial antioxidant thioredoxin-2 (Trx-2) in rat hippocampus (CA1, CA2, CA3 fields, and dentate gyrus) and neocortex was studied by immunocytochemistry. The preconditioning consisted of three trials of mild hypobaric hypoxia (360 Torr, 2 hr) spaced at 24 hr. The last trial was followed by severe hypobaric hypoxia (180 Torr, 3 hr) 24 hr later. Both in hippocampus and in neocortex, severe hypobaric hypoxia resulted in enhanced Trx-2 expression at 3 hr, followed by a slight decline in Trx-2 levels, which nevertheless remained increased at 24 hr elsewhere except for the CA1 region. The preconditioning considerably augmented severe hypoxia-induced Trx-2 immunoreactivity, affecting both the number of immunoreactive cells and the intensity of immunostaining. The findings suggest a role for Trx-2 in the formation of brain hypoxic/ischemic tolerance accomplished by the preconditioning.
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