生物
丙酸盐
咪唑
周围神经损伤
神经损伤
周围神经
雪旺细胞
外围设备
内科学
细胞生物学
内分泌学
神经科学
生物化学
解剖
医学
作者
Weilong Tang,Xiaoyu Yin,Kunyu Liu,Tuo Shao,Qichang Gao,Hongtao Shen,Xin Zhong,Zhenyu Zhang
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.yexcr.2024.114261
摘要
Peripheral nerve injury (PNI) accompanied with sensory and motor dysfunction has serious effect on the quality of life of patients. Intermittent fasting (IF), as a dietary pattern, has rarely been reported to influence imidazole propionate (ImP), a microbial metabolite, in vivo. To date, the link between ImP and PNI is unknown. This study aimed to explore the impact of ImP on the recovery after PNI and determine whether IF could reduce the concentration of ImP in vivo. Sciatic nerve injury rat model and RSC96 cells were utilized with 16s RNA seq, HE staining, CCK-8 assay, Western blot (WB), Transmission electron microscopy (TEM), immunofluorescence, transwell and scratch wound healing assays as read outs. WB, TEM, transwell and wound healing assay showed an inhibitory effect of ImP on autophagy and migration of Schwann cells. This negative effect on migration was reversed by rapamycin. Detection of p-Erk and p-mTOR confirmed that the MAPK/Erk/mTOR pathway was involved in this process. In vivo, IF changed the composition of gut microbiome, including bacteria related to ImP production and reduced the concentration of ImP in serum. In sum, IF influenced the composition of gut microbiome and reduced the concentration of ImP in vivo. The reduction of ImP promoted migration of SCs through enhancing autophagy which involved MAPK/Erk/mTOR pathway.
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