Potential therapeutic antipsychotic effects of Naringin against ketamine-induced deficits in rats: Involvement of Akt/GSK-3β and Wnt/β-catenin signaling pathways

2020 
Abstract Aim Schizophrenia is a chronic, disabling and one of the major neurological illnesses affecting nearly 1% of the global population. Currently available antipsychotic medications possess limited effects. The current research aimed at investigating potential therapeutic add-on benefit to enhance the effects of clozapine anti-schizophrenic. Main methods To induce schizophrenia, ketamine was administered at a dose of 25 mg/kg i.p. for 14 consecutive days. Naringin was administered to Wistar rats at a dose of 100 mg/kg orally, alone or in combination with clozapine 5 mg/kg i.p from day 8 to day 14. Furthermore, behavioral tests were conducted to evaluate positive, negative and cognitive symptoms of schizophrenia. In addition, neurotransmitters' levels were detected using HPLC. Moreover, oxidative stress markers were assessed using spectrophotometry. Furthermore, apoptotic and wnt/β-catenin pathway markers were determined using western blotting (Akt, GSK-3β and β-catenin), colorimetric methods (Caspase-3) and immunohistochemistry (Bax, Bcl2 and cytochrome c). Key findings Ketamine induced positive, negative and cognitive schizophrenia symptoms together with neurotransmitters' imbalance. In addition, ketamine treatment caused significant glutathione depletion, lipid peroxidation and reduction in catalase activity. Naringin and/or clozapine treatment significantly attenuated ketamine-induced schizophrenic symptoms and oxidative injury. Additionally, ketamine provoked apoptosis via increasing Bax/Bcl2 expression, caspase-3 activity, and Cytochrome C and Akt protein expression while naringin/clozapine treatment significantly inhibited this apoptotic effect. Moreover, naringin activated the neurodevelopmental wnt/β-catenin signaling pathway evidenced by increasing pGSK-3β and reducing pβ-catenin protein expression. Significance These findings may suggest that naringin possesses a potential therapeutic add-on effect against ketamine-induced schizophrenia.
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