AI Article Synopsis

  • Peroxisomes are key organelles involved in lipid metabolism, specifically in the breakdown of very long-chain fatty acids that mitochondria cannot process; inhibition of the enzyme ACOX1 in young rats impacts brain fatty acid composition and neuronal activity, mirroring changes seen in aging.
  • ACOX1 was selectively inhibited using TDYA in male Wistar rats over 25 days, leading to notable changes in brain fatty acid levels, with increased levels of certain fatty acids and decreased levels of others, signifying an altered lipid profile.
  • The inhibition of ACOX1 resulted in reduced excitability of neuronal cells, as evidenced by changes in resting membrane potential and action potential properties, highlighting the importance of peroxisome

Article Abstract

Introduction: Peroxisomes are essential organelles in lipid metabolism. They contain enzymes for β-oxidation of very long-chain fatty acids (VLCFA) that cannot be broken down in mitochondria. Reduced expression in hepatic acyl-CoA oxidase 1 (ACOX1), a peroxisome β-oxidation enzyme, followed by modification of the brain fatty acid profile has been observed in aged rodents. These studies have suggested a potential role for peroxisome β-oxidation in brain aging. This study was designed to examine the effect of hepatic ACOX1 inhibition on brain fatty acid composition and neuronal cell activities of young rats (200-250 g).

Methods: A specific ACOX1 inhibitor, 10, 12- tricosadiynoic acid (TDYA), 100 μg/kg (in olive oil) was administered by daily gavage for 25 days in male Wistar rats. The brain fatty acid composition and electrophysiological properties of dentate gyrus granule cells were determined using gas chromatography and whole-cell patch-clamp, respectively.

Results: A significant increase in C20, C22, C18:1, C20:1, and a decrease of C18, C24, C20:3n6, and C22:6n3 were found in 10, 12- tricosadiynoic acid (TDYA) treated rats compared to the control group. The results showed that ACOX1 inhibition changes fatty acid composition similar to old rats. ACOX1 inhibition caused hyperpolarization of resting membrane potential, and also reduction of input resistance, action potential duration, and spike firing. Moreover, ACOX1 inhibition increased rheobase current and afterhyperpolarization amplitude in granule cells.

Conclusion: The results indicated that systemic inhibition of ACOX1 causes hypo-excitability of neuronal cells. These results provide new evidence on the involvement of peroxisome function and hepatic ACOX1 activity in brain fatty acid profile and the electrophysiological properties of dentate gyrus cells.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11016873PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.32598/bcn.2021.3500.1DOI Listing

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