🧬 BDNF Extraction Viewer

Извлечено: 997 / 997 (100.0%) Средняя confidence: 0.13
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Trazodone modulates behavioral alterations in scopolamine-induced cognitive deficit by targeting brain-derived neurotropic factor and cAMP response element-binding protein signaling.

PMID: 41550299 · DOI: 10.3389/fncel.2025.1681080 · Frontiers in cellular neuroscience, 2025 · Prashant Dhaka, Pinky, Neha, Mohammad Ahmad Khan, Syed Arman Rabbani, Mohamed El-Tanani, Suhel Parvez
📄 Abstract

Trazodone, an antidepressant, may play a potential role in enhancing long-term memory by combining anxious behavior deficits induced by scopolamine. The current study proposes the potential novel mechanistic insights between oxidative stress and memory biomarkers, including BNDF and CREB pathways, to modulate the pathogenesis of AD-like symptoms. Behavioral deficits were studied in terms of biochemical determination of lipid peroxidation and acetylcholinesterase activities. In addition, the study looked at the immunohistochemistry of BDNF and CREB against scopolamine-induced AD-like symptoms. Moreover, histopathological alterations were also performed against an AD-like model. Aβ The present study findings showed that administration of TRAZ considerably improved cognitive impairments as validated by NOR and display of anti-anxiety behavior, as verified by EPM. In addition, biochemical findings confirmed that TRAZ lowered oxidative stress through LPO, reduced Aβ deposition, and decreased the AChE. Furthermore, there was a notable upregulation of BDNF and CREB signaling expression, as confirmed by the IHC. Overall, the study findings confirmed that TRAZ could be useful in mitigating the negative effects of scopolamine-induced cognitive impairment and lowering oxidative stress by enhancing memory indicators.

Confidence: 0.18 · 9 полей извлечено
Идентификация (6 полей)
Target
Trazodone
0.95
Alt. target
TRAZ
0.90
Protein family
0.00
Functional class
0.00
Subcellular loc.
0.00
Isoforms (metab/obesity)
0.00
Механизм действия (21 полей)
Mechanism
0.00
Mutations (obesity/lean)
0.00
Activity (obesity)
0.00
Activity temporal
0.00
Energy balance
0.00
Appetite
0.00
Fat metabolism
0.00
Lipolysis
0.00
Thermogenesis
0.00
Muscle metabolism
0.00
Inflammation
0.00
Glucose metabolism
0.00
AA metabolism
0.00
Hormonal pathways
0.00
Cell death
0.00
Adipocyte fibrosis
0.00
Upstream (biochem)
0.00
Upstream (physiol)
0.00
Downstream (biochem)
0.00
Downstream (physiol)
0.00
PTMs
0.00
Экспрессия (8 полей)
Tissue expression
0.00
In vitro
0.00
In vivo
Scopolamine-induced cognitive deficit model in animals (likely rodents) treated with trazodone; behavioral tests (NOR, EPM), biochemical assays (LPO, AChE, Aβ), and IHC for BDNF and CREB.
0.90
In silico
0.00
Genetic association
0.00
Ex vivo
0.00
Animal model
Scopolamine-induced cognitive deficit model (likely rodents)
0.90
Diet/model
Scopolamine-induced AD-like model
0.90
Клиника (11 полей)
Drug
Trazodone
1.00
Indication
Cognitive impairment, Alzheimer's disease-like symptoms
0.90
Patient subgroups
0.00
Safety concerns
0.00
Off-target
0.00
Trial stage
0.00
Pharma competitors
0.00
AE severity
0.00
MOA weight loss
0.00
Endpoints
Improved cognitive impairments, anti-anxiety behavior, reduced oxidative stress, reduced Aβ deposition, decreased AChE, upregulation of BDNF and CREB signaling
0.90
Approved
True
0.80