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      Antagonism of Histamine H3 receptors Alleviates Pentylenetetrazole-Induced Kindling and Associated Memory Deficits by Mitigating Oxidative Stress, Central Neurotransmitters, and c-Fos Protein Expression in Rats

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          Abstract

          Histamine H3 receptors (H3Rs) are involved in several neuropsychiatric diseases including epilepsy. Therefore, the effects of H3R antagonist E177 (5 and 10 mg/kg, intraperitoneal (i.p.)) were evaluated on the course of kindling development, kindling-induced memory deficit, oxidative stress levels (glutathione (GSH), malondialdehyde (MDA), catalase (CAT), and superoxide dismutase (SOD)), various brain neurotransmitters (histamine (HA), acetylcholine (ACh), γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA)), and glutamate (GLU), acetylcholine esterase (AChE) activity, and c-Fos protein expression in pentylenetetrazole (PTZ, 40 mg/kg) kindled rats. E177 (5 and 10 mg/kg, i.p.) significantly decreased seizure score, increased step-through latency (STL) time in inhibitory avoidance paradigm, and decreased transfer latency time (TLT) in elevated plus maze (all P < 0.05). Moreover, E177 mitigated oxidative stress by significantly increasing GSH, CAT, and SOD, and decreasing the abnormal level of MDA (all P < 0.05). Furthermore, E177 attenuated elevated levels of hippocampal AChE, GLU, and c-Fos protein expression, whereas the decreased hippocampal levels of HA and ACh were modulated in PTZ-kindled animals (all P < 0.05). The findings suggest the potential of H3R antagonist E177 as adjuvant to antiepileptic drugs with an added advantage of preventing cognitive impairment, highlighting the H3Rs as a potential target for the therapeutic management of epilepsy with accompanied memory deficits.

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          Critical review of current animal models of seizures and epilepsy used in the discovery and development of new antiepileptic drugs.

          Animal models for seizures and epilepsy have played a fundamental role in advancing our understanding of basic mechanisms underlying ictogenesis and epileptogenesis and have been instrumental in the discovery and preclinical development of novel antiepileptic drugs (AEDs). However, there is growing concern that the efficacy of drug treatment of epilepsy has not substantially improved with the introduction of new AEDs, which, at least in part, may be due to the fact that the same simple screening models, i.e., the maximal electroshock seizure (MES) and s.c. pentylenetetrazole (PTZ) seizure tests, have been used as gatekeepers in AED discovery for >6 decades. It has been argued that these old models may identify only drugs that share characteristics with existing drugs, and are unlikely to have an effect on refractory epilepsies. Indeed, accumulating evidence with several novel AEDs, including levetiracetan, has shown that the MES and PTZ models do not identify all potential AEDs but instead may fail to discover compounds that have great potential efficacy but work through mechanisms not tested by these models. Awareness of the limitations of acute seizure models comes at a critical crossroad. Clearly, preclinical strategies of AED discovery and development need a conceptual shift that is moving away from using models that identify therapies for the symptomatic treatment of epilepsy to those that may be useful for identifying therapies that are more effective in the refractory population and that may ultimately lead to an effective cure in susceptible individuals by interfering with the processes underlying epilepsy. To realize this goal, the molecular mechanisms of the next generation of therapies must necessarily evolve to include targets that contribute to epileptogenesis and pharmacoresistance in relevant epilepsy models. Copyright © 2011 British Epilepsy Association. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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            The use of c-fos as a metabolic marker in neuronal pathway tracing.

            The use of c-fos protein (Fos) immunocytochemistry as a metabolic marker for tracing neuroanatomical connections, seizure pathways and sites of action of neuroactive drugs is discussed in this report. Fos immunocytochemistry will be very useful for these purposes providing that a number of potential problems are recognized and controlled. These include the observations that Fos exists basally in neurons and can be non-specifically elevated after behavioural stress; neuronal bursting is required to elevate Fos in neurons in anaesthetized animals; drugs such as ketamine can block Fos elevation in neurons; the time-course of Fos induction and decay varies with different inducing stimuli and the brain region sampled; and some brain regions do not express Fos after any treatments tried so far. To overcome these potential problems we list a number of steps that should be followed when using Fos immunocytochemistry as a metabolic marker of brain activity.
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              Expression of c-fos protein in brain: metabolic mapping at the cellular level.

              The proto-oncogene c-fos is expressed in neurons in response to direct stimulation by growth factors and neurotransmitters. In order to determine whether the c-fos protein (Fos) and Fos-related proteins can be induced in response to polysynaptic activation, rat hindlimb motor/sensory cortex was stimulated electrically and Fos expression examined immunohistochemically. Three hours after the onset of stimulation, focal nuclear Fos staining was seen in motor and sensory thalamus, pontine nuclei, globus pallidus, and cerebellum. Moreover, 24-hour water deprivation resulted in Fos expression in paraventricular and supraoptic nuclei. Fos immunohistochemistry therefore provides a cellular method to label polysynaptically activated neurons and thereby map functional pathways.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: Academic Editor
                Journal
                Molecules
                Molecules
                molecules
                Molecules
                MDPI
                1420-3049
                30 March 2020
                April 2020
                : 25
                : 7
                : 1575
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Pharmacology & Therapeutics, College of Medicine and Health Sciences, United Arab Emirates University, Al Ain 17666, UAE; 201590025@ 123456uaeu.ac.ae (A.A.); azim.sheikh@ 123456uaeu.ac.ae (S.A.); shreeshojha@ 123456uaeu.ac.ae (S.K.O.); rbeiram@ 123456uaeu.ac.ae (R.B.)
                [2 ]Department of Biology, College of Science, United Arab Emirates University, Al Ain 17666, UAE; m.lotfy@ 123456uaeu.ac.ae
                [3 ]Department of Anatomy, College of Medicine and Health Sciences, United Arab Emirates University, Al Ain 17666, UAE; eadeghate@ 123456uaeu.ac.ae
                [4 ]Jagiellonian University Medical College, Faculty of Pharmacy, Department of Technology and Biotechnology of Drugs, Medyczna 9 St., 30-688 Kraków, Poland; dlazewska@ 123456cm-uj.krakow.pl (D.Ł.); mfkonono@ 123456cyf-kr.edu.pl (K.K.-K.)
                Author notes
                [* ]Correspondence: bassem.sadek@ 123456uaeu.ac.ae ; Tel.: +971-3-7137-512; Fax: +971-3-7672-033
                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8454-4440
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6752-7443
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0320-1487
                Article
                molecules-25-01575
                10.3390/molecules25071575
                7181068
                32235506
                50129d7e-e72f-4b26-9e9c-16da37903c8e
                © 2020 by the authors.

                Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

                History
                : 13 March 2020
                : 27 March 2020
                Categories
                Article

                histamine h3 receptor,antagonist,ptz-kindling,memory impairment,neuroprotection,oxidative stress,ache activity,c-fos protein expression,rats

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