harpagoside has been researched along with Dementia--Vascular* in 1 studies
1 other study(ies) available for harpagoside and Dementia--Vascular
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Harpagoside Rescues the Memory Impairments in Chronic Cerebral Hypoperfusion Rats by Inhibiting PTEN Activity.
Vascular dementia (VaD) is the second most common dementia worldwide. Unlike Alzheimer's disease, VaD does not yet have effective therapeutic drugs. Harpagoside is the most important component extracted from Harpagophytum procumbens, a traditional Chinese medicine that has been widely used. The neuroprotective effects of harpagoside have been studied in Aβ- and MPTP-induced neurotoxicity. However, whether harpagoside is protective against VaD is not clear. In this study, with the use of chronic cerebral hypoperfusion rats, a well-known VaD model, we demonstrated that chronic administration (two months) of harpagoside was able to restore both the spatial learning/memory and fear memory impairments. Importantly, the protective effects of harpagoside were not due to alterations in the physiological conditions, metabolic parameters, or locomotor abilities of the rats. Meanwhile, we found that harpagoside suppressed the overactivation of PTEN induced by CCH by enhancing PTEN phosphorylation. Furthermore, harpagoside elevated the activity of Akt and inhibited the activity of GSK-3β, downstream effectors of PTEN. Overall, our study suggested that harpagoside treatment might be a potential therapeutic drug targeting the cognitive impairments of VaD. Topics: Animals; Dementia, Vascular; Disease Models, Animal; Glycosides; Hippocampus; Learning; Male; Motor Activity; Neurons; Neuroprotective Agents; Nootropic Agents; PTEN Phosphohydrolase; Pyrans; Random Allocation; Rats, Wistar | 2018 |