1. [Changes of the genome-wide DNA methylation level in various regions of the rat brain with incomplete cerebral ischemia].
- Author
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Shcherbak NS, Suchkova IO, Dergacheva NI, Patkin EL, and Voznyuk IA
- Subjects
- Rats, Male, Animals, Rats, Wistar, Brain, Cerebral Infarction, DNA, DNA Methylation, Brain Ischemia genetics
- Abstract
Objective: To quantify genome-wide DNA methylation in the olfactory bulbs, fronto-parietal and occipital regions, and cerebellum in normal male Wistar rats and in modeling incomplete cerebral ischemia caused by permanent bilateral occlusion of the common carotid arteries., Material and Methods: The study was performed on 23 male Wistar rats divided into groups: «Sham operation» and «Cerebral ischemia». The level of genome-wide methylation of CCGG sites was determined by methyl-sensitive restriction using MspI/HpaII endonucleases followed by densitometric analysis of electrophoregrams by ImageJ software., Results: Incomplete cerebral ischemia on the 7th day leads to 56.3% (95% CI: 33.2-76.90) mortality. In the surviving rats of the «Cerebral ischemia» group, compared with the animals of the «Sham operation» group, a pronounced neurological deficit was observed, which was accompanied by changes in the level of whole-genome DNA methylation in the nervous tissue of brain structures ( p <0.05). Incomplete cerebral ischemia in male Wistar rats was characterized by interhemispheric asymmetry in the severity and direction of the epigenomic reaction of the nervous tissue in both ischemic and non-ischemic areas of the brain., Conclusion: It is likely that it is precisely this dynamics of changes in the status of genome-wide DNA methylation in the nervous tissue that imparts plasticity to neuronal function during ischemic damage.
- Published
- 2023
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