H2S Regulates Hypobaric Hypoxia-Induced Early Glio-Vascular Dysfunction and Neuro-Pathophysiological Effects

Kumar, Gaurav ; Chhabra, Aastha ; Mishra, Shalini ; Kalam, Haroon ; Kumar, Dhiraj ; Meena, Ramniwas ; Ahmad, Yasmin ; Bhargava, Kalpana ; Prasad, Dipti N. ; Sharma, Manish (2016) H2S Regulates Hypobaric Hypoxia-Induced Early Glio-Vascular Dysfunction and Neuro-Pathophysiological Effects EBioMedicine, 6 . pp. 171-189. ISSN 23523964

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Official URL: http://doi.org/10.1016/j.ebiom.2016.03.002

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ebiom.2016.03.002

Abstract

Hypobaric Hypoxia (HH) is an established risk factor for various neuro-physiological perturbations including cognitive impairment. The origin and mechanistic basis of such responses however remain elusive. We here combined systems level analysis with classical neuro-physiological approaches, in a rat model system, to understand pathological responses of brain to HH. Unbiased ‘statistical co-expression networks’ generated utilizing temporal, differential transcriptome signatures of hippocampus—centrally involved in regulating cognition—implicated perturbation of Glio-Vascular homeostasis during early responses to HH, with concurrent modulation of vasomodulatory, hemostatic and proteolytic processes. Further, multiple lines of experimental evidence from ultra-structural, immuno-histological, substrate-zymography and barrier function studies unambiguously supported this proposition. Interestingly, we show a significant lowering of H2S levels in the brain, under chronic HH conditions. This phenomenon functionally impacted hypoxia-induced modulation of cerebral blood flow (hypoxic autoregulation) besides perturbing the strength of functional hyperemia responses. The augmentation of H2S levels, during HH conditions, remarkably preserved Glio-Vascular homeostasis and key neuro-physiological functions (cerebral blood flow, functional hyperemia and spatial memory) besides curtailing HH-induced neuronal apoptosis in hippocampus. Our data thus revealed causal role of H2S during HH-induced early Glio-Vascular dysfunction and consequent cognitive impairment.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to Research Gate.
Keywords:Hypobaric Hypoxia; Co-expression networks; Neuro-Vascular Unit; Glio-Vascular Unit; Cognition; H2S
ID Code:136036
Deposited On:19 May 2025 08:46
Last Modified:19 May 2025 08:46

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