4.6 Article

Quercetin ameliorates diabetic encephalopathy through SIRT1/ER stress pathway in db/db mice

Journal

AGING-US
Volume 12, Issue 8, Pages 7015-7029

Publisher

IMPACT JOURNALS LLC
DOI: 10.18632/aging.103059

Keywords

quercetin; diabetic encephalopathy; SIRT1; ER stress

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81674040]
  2. Guangzhou Science Technology and Innovation Commission Technology Research Projects [201805010005]

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Studies have shown that diabetes is an important risk factor for cognitive dysfunction, also called diabetic encephalopathy (DE). Quercetin has been reported to be effective in improving cognitive dysfunction in DE. But its detailed mechanism is still ambiguous. In this study, we used db/db mice to investigate whether quercetin could activate SIRT1 and inhibit ER pathways to improve DE. Behavioral tests (Morris water maze and new objects) showed that quercetin (70 mg/kg) can effectively improve the learning and memory ability in db/db mice. OGTT and ITT tests indicated that quercetin could alleviate impaired glucose tolerance and insulin resistance in db/db mice. Western blot analysis and Nissl staining showed that quercetin can improve the expression of nerve and synapse-associated proteins (PSD93, PSD95, NGF and BDNF) and inhibit neurodegeneration. Meanwhile, quercetin up-regulates SIRT1 protein expression and inhibits the expression of ER signaling pathway-related proteins (PERK, IRE-1 alpha, ATF6, elF2 alpha, BIP and PDI). In addition, oxidative stress levels were significantly reduced after quercetin treatment. In conclusion, current experimental results indicated that SIRT1/ER stress is a promising mechanism involved in quercetin-treated diabetic encephalopathy.

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