1.Neurobiological mechanisms of conditioned fear memory reconsolidation
nan Hao LI ; wei Hong SUN ; Gang WANG ; yu Yan WANG ; zhi Neng JIANG ; Lin SUN
Chinese Journal of Pathophysiology 2017;33(9):1718-1722
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a reactive mental disorder that occurs after an individual was exposed to a traumatic event,and the core of the treatment is the extinction of conditioned fear memory caused by stress.Fear memory is an incentive mechanism based on external stimuli that occupy a central position in the defense system.Traditional memory concept convinced that the original memory traces were in an unstable state when the memory was activated.This process is called memory reconsolidation.The research has proved the existence of the fear memory reconsolidation,but the specific mechanism of reconsolidation has not been clarified.The animal studies show that many brain sites and molecular mechanisms are involved in the process of fear memory reconsolidation.Understanding the underlying mechanisms of fear memory reconsolidation is conducive to the treatment of specific phobias and PTSD.This review summarized the brain structure and molecular mechanism of conditioned fear memory reconsolidation,providing a new direction for the in-depth study of conditioned fear memory reconsolidation and PTSD.
2.Antidepressant-like effects of the ethanolic extract of Xiaobuxin-Tang, a traditional Chinese herbal prescription in animal models of depression.
You-zhi ZHANG ; Yun-feng LI ; Neng-jiang YU ; Li YUAN ; Yi-min ZHAO ; Wen-bin XIAO ; Zhi-pu LUO
Chinese Medical Journal 2007;120(20):1792-1796
BACKGROUNDXiaobuxin-Tang, a traditional Chinese herbal prescription recorded in a silk scroll unearthed from Mogao Caves of Dunhuang has been indicated that it can remit depressive disorder. The present study was designed to investigate its antidepressant effects in various animal depression models.
METHODSXiaobuxin-Tang was extracted by 70% alcohol, and then three behavioral despair models and 5-Hydroxytryptophan (HTP)-induced head twitch response model were adopted to assess the antidepressant effects of the ethanolic extract of Xiaobuxin-Tang with the study on spontaneous motor activity. Groups of mice and rats received oral treatment with Xiaobuxin-Tang (150 - 1200 mg/kg) only once acutely in all tests. The duration of immobility was measured during the last 4 minutes of the 6-minutes test period in mice forced swimming test, rats forced swimming test and mice tail suspension test. In 5-HTP-induced head twitch response, the mice were intraperitoneally administered with 120 mg/kg of L-5-HTP, and then the cumulative number of head twitches was counted in 20 minutes. Spontaneous motor activities of mice were recorded automatically in 10 minutes by VIDEOMEX-V image analytic system.
RESULTSThe extract at doses of 300 mg/kg (p.o.) and 600 mg/kg (p.o.) significantly decreased the duration of immobility time in a dose dependent manner in mice forced swimming test; also, the extract at dose of 1200 mg/kg (p.o.) significantly decreased the duration of immobility time in rat forced swimming test. Furthermore, the extract at a dose of 600 mg/kg had the same effect in mice tail suspension test. Meanwhile, the extract at the effective doses for behavioral despair models, had no effect on spontaneous motor activity in mice. The extract (300 - 1200 mg/kg, p.o.) also increased the accumulative number of the 5-HTP-induced head twitch response in mice in 20 minutes.
CONCLUSIONOur results suggested that the ethanolic extract of Xiaobuxin-Tang exerts antidepressant-like effect.
Animals ; Antidepressive Agents ; pharmacology ; Depression ; drug therapy ; Disease Models, Animal ; Drugs, Chinese Herbal ; pharmacology ; Hindlimb Suspension ; Male ; Mice ; Mice, Inbred ICR ; Motor Activity ; drug effects ; Swimming
3.Correlation of oxidative stress with sperm DNA integrity and semen parameters in infertile men with varicocele.
Hao FU ; Wen-Ke SONG ; Xiao-Hui LING ; Cai-Feng GAO ; Zhi-Yun CHEN ; Jun ZHANG ; Fu-Neng JIANG
National Journal of Andrology 2016;22(6):530-533
ObjectiveTo investigate the relationship of oxidative stress with DNA integrity and semen parameters in infertile men with varicocele (VC).
METHODSThis prospective study included 98 infertile males with VC. According to the levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in the semen, we divided the patients into a high ROS group (n=44) and a low ROS group (n=54), determined the sperm DNA fragmentation index (DFI), motility and morphology, and analyzed their correlation with ROS in the two groups of patients.
RESULTSCompared with the patients of the low ROS group, those of the high ROS group showed a significantly higher DFI (27.38±8.10 vs 34.49±6.05, P=0.039) and a higher concentration of seminal leukocytes ([0.65±0.15]×10⁶/ml vs [0.86±0.41]×10⁶/ml, P=0.022), but lower sperm motility ([36.16±22.83]% vs [18.22±25.21]%, P=0.017), percentage of progressively motile sperm ([23.34±11.53]% vs [16.34±9.22]%, P=0.041), sperm curvilinear velocity ([27.03±6.21] vs [20.62±4.38] μm/s, P=0.013), and sperm linearity ([29.75±8.24]% vs [18.30±7.93]%, P=0.024). Spearman correlation analysis indicated that the ROS level was correlated positively with the concentration of seminal leukocytes (r=0.41, P<0.01) and DFI (r=0.21, P=0.006), but negatively with sperm curvilinear velocity (r=-0.24, P=0.017), linearity (r=-0.24, P=0.021), motility (r=-0.31, P=0.002), and the percentage of progressively motile sperm (r=-0.41, P=0.012). Additionally, the sperm DFI manifested a significant negative correlation with sperm motility (r=-0.29, P<0.01) and the percentage of progressively motile sperm (r=-0.34, P<0.01).
CONCLUSIONSThe level of seminal ROS is positively correlated with the sperm DFI in infertile men with varicocele, and both the ROS level and DNA integrity are associated with semen parameters.
DNA Fragmentation ; Humans ; Infertility, Male ; complications ; Male ; Oxidative Stress ; Prospective Studies ; Reactive Oxygen Species ; metabolism ; Semen ; Sperm Motility ; Spermatozoa ; pathology ; Varicocele ; complications