Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6012324 | Epilepsy & Behavior | 2014 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Injection of a single effective dose of thalidomide (10Â mg/kg, i.p. or higher) significantly increased the seizure threshold (PÂ <Â 0.05). On the one hand, pretreatment with low and per se noneffective dose of l-arginine [NO precursor] (10, 30 and 60Â mg/kg) prevented the anticonvulsant effect of thalidomide. On the other hand, NOS inhibitors [l-NAME and 7-NI] augmented the anticonvulsant effect of a subeffective dose of thalidomide (1 and 5Â mg/kg, i.p.) at relatively low doses. Meanwhile, several doses of aminoguanidine [an inducible NOS inhibitor] (20, 50 and 100Â mg/kg) failed to alter the anticonvulsant effect of thalidomide significantly. In summary, our findings demonstrated that the l-arginine-nitric oxide pathway can be involved in the anticonvulsant properties of thalidomide, and the role of constitutive nNOS is prominent in the reported neuroprotective feature.
Related Topics
Life Sciences
Neuroscience
Behavioral Neuroscience
Authors
Borna Payandemehr, Reza Rahimian, Maziar Gooshe, Arash Bahremand, Ramtin Gholizadeh, Sina Berijani, Mohammad Ahmadi-Dastgerdi, Mehdi Aminizade, Ali Sarreshte-Dari, Vahid Dianati, Massoud Amanlou, Ahmad Reza Dehpour,