Abstract

The astrocyte marker, glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), has essential functions in the brain, but may trigger astroglial scarring when expressed in excess. Docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) is an n-3 fatty acid that is protective during brain development. However, the effect of DHA on GFAP levels of developing brain remains unexplored. Here, we detected that treating developing rats with DHA-enriched fish-oil caused dose-dependent GFAP augmentation. We investigated the mechanism promoting GFAP, hypothesizing the participation of fatty acid-binding protein-7 (FABP7), known to bind DHA. We identified that DHA stimulated FABP7 expression in astrocytes, and FABP7-silencing suppressed DHA-induced GFAP, indicating FABP7-mediated GFAP increase. Further investigation proved FABP7 expression to be phosphatidylinositide 3-kinases (PI3K)/AKT and nuclear receptor peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma (PPARγ)-dependent. We found that PI3K/AKT activated PPARγ that triggered FABP7 expression via PPARγ-responsive elements within its gene. Towards identifying FABP7-downstream pathways, we considered our previous report that demonstrated cyclin-dependent kinase-5 (CDK5)-PPARγ-protein-protein complex to suppress GFAP. We found that the DHA-induced FABP7 underwent protein-protein interaction with PPARγ, which impeded CDK5-PPARγ formation. Hence, it appeared that enhanced FABP7-PPARγ in lieu of CDK5-PPARγ resulted in increased GFAP. PI3K/AKT not only stimulated formation of FABP7-PPARγ protein-protein complex, but also up-regulated a FABP7-independent MAP-kinase-phosphatase-3 pathway that inactivated CDK5 and hence attenuated CDK5-PPARγ. Overall, our data reveal that via the proximal PI3K/AKT, DHA induces FABP7-PPARγ, through genomic and non-genomic mechanisms, and MAP-kinase-phosphatase-3 that converged at attenuated CDK5-PPARγ and therefore, enhanced GFAP. Accordingly, our study demonstrates a DHA-mediated astroglial hyperactivation, pointing toward a probable injurious role of DHA in brain development.

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