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Curcumin Attenuates Chronic Unpredictable Mild Stress-Induced Depressive-Like Behaviors via Restoring Changes in Oxidative Stress and the Activation of Nrf2 Signaling Pathway in Rats

Dehua Liao, Chuanfeng Lv, Lizhi Cao, Dunwu Yao, Yi Wu, Minghui Long, Ni Liu, Pei Jiang

2020Oxidative Medicine and Cellular Longevity110 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Accumulating evidence has demonstrated that oxidative stress is associated with depression. Our present study aimed at investigating the antidepressant effect and the possible mechanisms of curcumin (CUR) in chronic unpredictable mild stress- (CUMS-) induced depression model in rats. After exposure to CUMS for four weeks, the rats showed depressive-like behavior, and the depressive-like behaviors in CUMS-treated rats were successfully corrected after administration of CUR. In addition, CUR could effectively decrease protein expression of oxidative stress markers (Nox2, 4-HNE, and MDA) and increase the activity of CAT. CUR treatment also reversed CUMS-induced inhibition of Nrf2-ARE signaling pathway, along with increasing the mRNA expression of NQO-1 and HO-1. Furthermore, the supplementation of CUR also increased the ratio of pCREB/CREB and synaptic-related protein (BDNF, PSD-95, and synaptophysin). In addition, CUR could effectively reverse CUMS-induced reduction of spine density and total dendritic length. In conclusion, the study revealed that CUR relieves depressive-like state through the mitigation of oxidative stress and the activation of Nrf2-ARE signaling pathway.

Topics & Concepts

Oxidative stressCurcuminCREBSynaptophysinAntidepressantChronic stressPharmacologySignal transductionChemistryEndocrinologyOxidative phosphorylationInternal medicineMedicineHippocampusBiochemistryTranscription factorImmunohistochemistryGeneCurcumin's Biomedical ApplicationsTryptophan and brain disordersStress Responses and Cortisol