N-acetylcysteine treatment following spinal cord trauma reduces neural tissue damage and improves locomotor function in mice

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Abstract

Following spinal cord trauma, mitochondrial dysfunction associated with increased oxidative stress is a critical event leading to leukocyte inflammatory responses, neuronal cell death and demyelination, contributing to permanent locomotor and neurological disability. The present study demonstrated that the mitochondrial enhancer N-acetylcysteine (NAC) may restore redox balance via enhancement of mitochondrial respiratory activity following traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI). In addition, NAC ameliorates oxidative stress-induced neuronal loss, demyelination, leukocyte infiltration and inflammatory mediator expression and improves long-term locomotor function. Furthermore, neuronal survival and neurological recovery are significantly correlated with increased mitochondrial bioenergetics in SCI following treatment with NAC. Therefore, NAC may represent a potential therapeutic agent for preserving mitochondrial dynamics and integrity following traumatic SCI.

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Guo, J., Li, Y., Chen, Z., He, Z., Zhang, B., Li, Y., … Li, Y. (2015). N-acetylcysteine treatment following spinal cord trauma reduces neural tissue damage and improves locomotor function in mice. Molecular Medicine Reports, 12(1), 37–44. https://doi.org/10.3892/mmr.2015.3390

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