Abstract

Chronic cerebral hypoperfusion (CCH) has been shown to initiate several inflammatory pathways that can contribute to cognitive deficits and memory loss in vascular cognitive impairment (VCI). Multi-protein complexes termed inflammasomes that may be involved in the inflammatory response to CCH has already been shown to contribute to the inflammatory process and cell death following acute cerebral ischemia. Intermittent fasting (IF) has already been shown to decrease inflammasome activation and protect the brain from ischemic stroke; however, its effects during CCH remains unknown. The present study investigated the impact of IF (16 h of food deprivation daily) for four months on inflammasome-mediated cell death in the cerebellum following CCH in a mouse model of VCI using fourteen to sixteen-week-old male C57BL/6NTac mice. Here we demonstrated that IF decreased inflammasome activation, and initiation of apoptotic and pyroptotic cell death pathways as reflected by the reduction (20–30%) in the expression levels of key effector proteins and cell death markers in the cerebellum following CCH. In summary, our results indicate that IF can attenuate the inflammatory response and cell death pathways in the brain following chronic hypoperfusion in a mouse model of VCI.

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