Journal article
Ebselen prevents cigarette smoke-induced cognitive dysfunction in mice by preserving hippocampal synaptophysin expression
SN De Luca, K Brassington, SMH Chan, A Dobric, K Mou, HJ Seow, R Vlahos
Journal of Neuroinflammation | Published : 2022
Open access
Abstract
Background: Cigarette smoking (CS) is the leading cause of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). The “spill-over” of pulmonary inflammation into the systemic circulation may damage the brain, leading to cognitive dysfunction. Cessation of CS can improve pulmonary and neurocognitive outcomes, however, its benefit on the neuroinflammatory profile remains uncertain. Here, we investigate how CS exposure impairs neurocognition and whether this can be reversed with CS cessation or an antioxidant treatment. Methods: Male BALB/c mice were exposed to CS (9 cigarettes/day for 8 weeks) followed by 4 weeks of CS cessation. Another cohort of CS-exposed mice were co-administrated with a glutathion..
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Awarded by Lung Foundation Australia
Funding Acknowledgements
This study was supported by the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia [Project Grant ID1139843] and Lung Foundation Australia/Boehringer Ingelheim Fellowship awarded to Dr De Luca.