E. A. Rybnikova
Russian Academy of Sciences
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Featured researches published by E. A. Rybnikova.
Behavioural Brain Research | 2005
E. A. Rybnikova; L. A. Vataeva; E. I. Tyulkova; Tatiana Gluschenko; V. A. Otellin; Markku Pelto-Huikko; Michail Samoilov
The aim of this work was to study effects of mild preconditioning hypobaric hypoxia (380 Torr for 2 h, repeated 3 or 6 times spaced at 24 h) on brain NGFI-A immunoreactivity and passive avoidance (PA) behavior in rats exposed to severe hypoxia (160 Torr for 3 h). Severe hypobaric hypoxia produced extensive neuronal loss in hippocampal CA1, while the preceding hypoxic preconditioning had clear protective effect on neuronal viability of vulnerable hippocampal cells. Besides, the hypoxic preconditioning prevented impairment of acquisition and retention of PA caused by severe hypoxia. The six-trial hypobaric preconditioning was more effective in protection against PA learning deficits in severe hypoxia exposed rats than the three-trial preconditioning. The preconditioning up-regulated severe hypoxia-suppressed neocortical and hippocampal expression of NGFI-A, suggesting a possible role for NGFI-A in the neuroprotective mechanisms activated by hypoxic preconditioning.
Brain Research | 2006
E. A. Rybnikova; Nadezhda Sitnik; Tatjana Gluschenko; Ekaterina I. Tjulkova; Michail Samoilov
The patterns of expression of the Bcl-2, Bax, and Bcl-xL proteins were examined immunocytochemically in rat hippocampus and neocortex after severe hypobaric hypoxia (180 Torr for 3 h) and severe hypoxia preconditioned by intermittent mild hypoxia (360 Torr for 2 h daily, for 3 consecutive days, 24 h prior to severe hypoxia). As revealed by TUNEL assay, severe hypobaric hypoxia produced extensive apoptotic damage to the neurons of hippocampal CA1-CA4 and the neocortex but not the dentate gyrus granule cells. Remarkable posthypoxic up-regulation of Bax expression maximal at 24 h was detected in the CA1-CA4 areas of hippocampus and neocortex 3-72 h after severe hypoxia. The preconditioning to severe hypoxia protected neurons from the posthypoxic apoptotic transformations, the up-regulation of Bax expression, and resulted in persistent overexpression of Bcl-2 and Bcl-xL. We conclude that the protective action of hypoxic preconditioning is at least in part mediated by shifting of neuronal Bax/Bcl-2-Bcl-xL ratio to a favor of antiapoptotic proteins Bcl-2 and Bcl-xL.
Journal of Neurochemistry | 2008
E. A. Rybnikova; Tatjana Gluschenko; Ekaterina Tulkova; A. V. Churilova; Oksana Jaroshevich; K. A. Baranova; Michail Samoilov
Preconditioning using mild repetitive hypobaric hypoxia is known to increase a tolerance of brain neurons to severe hypoxia and other injurious exposures. In the present study, the effects of mild hypoxic preconditioning on the expression of transcription factors NF‐κB and phosphorylated CREB (pCREB) has been studied in the neocortex of rats exposed to severe hypobaric hypoxia. As revealed by quantitative immunocytochemistry, the injurious severe hypobaric hypoxia (180 Torr, 3 h) remarkably reduced the neocortical levels of pCREB and NF‐κB. The three‐trial hypoxic preconditioning (360 Torr, 2 h, 3 days) induced persistent up‐regulation of pCREB and NF‐κB expression in the neocortex of rats 3–24 h following the severe hypoxia. In addition, the preconditioning alone which was not followed by the severe hypoxia, considerably increased neocortical pCREB and NF‐κB levels. The findings suggest a role for transcription factors cAMP response element‐binding protein and NF‐κB in the neuroprotective mechanisms activated by the hypoxic preconditioning.
Neuroscience Research | 2009
E. A. Rybnikova; T. S. Glushchenko; E. I. Tyulkova; K. A. Baranova; Michail Samoilov
Transcription factors c-Fos and NGFI-A encoded by immediate early genes largely participate in the biochemical cascade leading to genomically driven lasting adaptation by neurons to injurious exposures including hypoxia/ischemia. Present study was designed to examine the involvement of c-Fos and NGFI-A in the development of brain hypoxic tolerance induced by mild hypoxic preconditioning. Earlier we have reported that preconditioning by repetitive mild hypobaric hypoxia (MHH) considerably increases neuronal resistance to subsequent severe injurious exposures. Herein, changes of c-Fos and NGFI-A expression in vulnerable rat brain areas (hippocampus, neocortex) in response to preconditioning MHH itself were studied using quantitative immunocytochemistry. Exposure to MHH differentially enhanced c-Fos and NGFI-A expression in neocortex and hippocampal fields 3-24h following the last MHH trial. The c-Fos up-regulation was the most pronounced in neocortex, CA1, and dentate gyrus, but it was twice lower in CA3/CA4. The up-regulation of NGFI-A in CA1, dentate gyrus and neocortex was 1.5-2-fold lower than that of c-Fos; but in CA3 and CA4 the rates of the c-Fos and NGFI-A induction were comparable. The present findings indicate that cooperative but differential activation of c-Fos and NGFI-A expression in vulnerable brain areas contribute to the development of tolerance achieved by MHH preconditioning.
Neuroscience Letters | 2007
E. A. Rybnikova; V. I. Mironova; S. G. Pivina; Ekaterina Tulkova; N. E. Ordyan; L. A. Vataeva; Elena A. Vershinina; Eugeny Abritalin; Alexandr Kolchev; Natalia N. Nalivaeva; Anthony J. Turner; Michail Samoilov
The effects of preconditioning using mild repetitive hypobaric hypoxia (360 Torr for 2 h each of 3 days) have been studied in the learned helplessness model of depression in rats. Male Wistar rats displayed persistent depressive symptoms (depressive-like behaviour in open field, increased anxiety levels in elevated plus maze, ahedonia, elevated plasma glucocorticoids and impaired dexamethasone test) following the exposure to unpredictable and inescapable footshock in the learned helplessness paradigm. Antidepressant treatment (ludiomil, 5 mg/kg i.p.) augmented the development of the depressive state. The hypoxic preconditioning had a clear antidepressive action returning the behavioural and hormonal parameters to the control values and was equally effective in terms of our study as the antidepressant. The findings suggest hypoxic preconditioning as an effective tool for the prophylaxis of post-stress affective pathologies in humans.
Psychoneuroendocrinology | 2007
E. A. Rybnikova; V. I. Mironova; S. G. Pivina; Ekaterina Tulkova; N. E. Ordyan; Natalia N. Nalivaeva; Anthony J. Turner; Michail Samoilov
The preconditioning (PC) by using mild intermittent hypobaric hypoxia (PC) increases a resistance of the brain to severe hypoxia/ischemia and various stresses. Recently, potent antidepressant-like effects of PC have been described in animal models of depression. In the present study, the impact of PC on the activity and feedback regulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis (HPA) impaired in depression has been studied in the model of shock-induced depression in rats. PC completely prevented depressive-like behavior (54% reduction in ambulance, 59% reduction in rearing in the open field, 654% increase of the anxiety level in the elevated plus maze), the HPA hyperactivity and the impairment of HPA feedback regulation that appeared in response to the inescapable footshock. Not affecting basal HPA activity, PC remarkably enhanced the HPA reactivity to stresses and substantially up-regulated the expression of glucocorticoid receptors in the ventral hippocampus following footshock that apparently contributes to the mechanisms responsible for the antidepressant-like action of PC.
Neuroscience Letters | 2012
E. A. Rybnikova; Maksim Vorobyev; S. G. Pivina; M. O. Samoilov
A potent neuroprotective effect of ischemic postconditioning has previously been described using cerebral artery occlusion but this is not a practical therapeutic option. The present study has been performed to determine whether postconditioning by mild episodes of hypobaric hypoxia (hypoxic postconditioning, HP) can reduce post-hypoxic brain injury in rats. Male Wistar rats were submitted to severe hypobaric hypoxia (180 Torr, 3 h) followed by HP (360 Torr, 2 h, 3 trials spaced at 24 h) starting either 3h (early HP) or 24 h (delayed HP) after severe hypoxia. The structural and functional brain injury was assessed by a complex of histological techniques, behavioral methods, and by testing the functions of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis (HPA). It was found that early and delayed HP considerably attenuated post-hypoxic injury, reducing pyknosis, hyperchromatosis, and interstitial brain edema, as well as the rates of neuronal loss in hippocampus and neocortex. Delayed HP produced prominent anxiolytic effect on rat behavior, preventing development of post-hypoxic anxiety. Both modes of HP had beneficial effect on the functioning of HPA, but only delayed HP normalized completely the baseline HPA activity and its reactivity to stress. The results obtained demonstrate that postconditioning by using repetitive episodes of mild hypobaric hypoxia may provide a powerful neuroprotective procedure that can be easily adopted for clinical practice and recommended as a research tool for identification of endogenous mechanisms involved in post-ischemic neuroprotection.
Neuroscience and Behavioral Physiology | 2005
E. A. Rybnikova; Khozhai Li; E. I. Tyulkova; T. S. Glushchenko; Sitnik Na; Markku Pelto-Huikko; V. A. Otellin; M. O. Samoilov
The Nissl method and immunocytochemistry were used to study the effects of severe hypobaric hypoxia and its actions in combination with the preconditioning actions of moderate hypoxia on the expression of the early gene proteins c-Fos and NGFI-A as well as structural changes in hippocampal and neocortical neurons in the rat brain. Severe hypoxia was found to suppress c-Fos and NGFI-A synthesis (3–24 h after exposure) and to induce delayed (days 3–7) structural damage to neurons, of the “light” and predominantly the “dark” types, which appear to reflect the development of necrotic and apoptotic processes respectively. Preconditioning with the regime used here corrected these derangements, resulting in increases in the expression of early gene proteins and significant reductions in structural damage to neurons after severe hypoxia.
Brain Research | 2011
E. A. Rybnikova; T. S. Glushchenko; A. V. Churilova; S. G. Pivina; Michail Samoilov
Effects of mild (preconditioning) and severe injurious hypobaric hypoxia (SH), as well as of their combination on hippocampal expression of glucocorticoid (GR) and mineralocorticoid (MR) receptors and HPA axis activity have been examined in rats. As revealed by quantitative immunocytochemistry, three-trial exposure to mild hypoxia produced robust GR and MR overexpression located mainly in the neuronal nuclei in the dentate gyrus (DG) but only MR overexpression was observed in the CA1. SH induced sharp reduction of MR levels and enhanced GR expression in the CA1, suggesting that the unbalance of GR and MR observed might be at the bottom of the extensive neuronal loss seen in this area in response to SH. Contrastingly, SH in tolerant (preconditioned) rats failed to imbalance GR and MR expression in CA1 and up-regulated GR levels in DG. Radioimmunoassay of serum corticosterone showed that both preconditioning hypoxia itself and SH in tolerant rats produced moderate activation of HPA axis followed by its proper inactivation. In the non-preconditioned rats, HPA axis response to SH was impaired. Taken together, these novel results suggest that modifications of the hippocampal expression of GR and MR produced by preconditioning may contribute to the molecular and neuroendocrine mechanisms of tolerance to severe hypoxic stress.
Neuroscience and Behavioral Physiology | 2008
E. A. Rybnikova; M. O. Samoilov; V. I. Mironova; E. I. Tyul’kova; S. G. Pivina; L. A. Vataeva; N. E. Ordyan; E. Yu. Abritalin; A. I. Kolchev
The protective effects of hypoxic preconditioning on the development of depressive states in rat models were studied. Three episodes of intermittent preconditioning using hypobaric hypoxia (360 mmHg, 2 h) prevented the onset of depressive behavioral reactions, hyperfunction of the hypophyseal-adrenal system, and impairments in its suppression in the dexamethasone test in rats following unavoidable aversive stress in a model of endogenous depression. The anxiolytic and antidepressant actions of hypoxic preconditioning in experiments on rats were no less marked than those of the tetracyclic antidepressant ludiomil. The results obtained here provide evidence that preconditioning with intermittent hypobaric hypoxia increases resistance to psychoemotional stresses, has marked anxiolytic and antidepressant effects, and can be used for the prophylaxis of depressive episodes.