首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
2.
Acute administration of repeated doses of 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA, ecstasy) dramatically reduces striatal dopamine (DA) content, tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), and DA transporter-immunoreactivity in mice. In this study, we show for the first time the spatiotemporal pattern of dopaminergic damage and related molecular events produced by MDMA administration in mice. Our results include the novel finding that MDMA produces a significant decrease in the number of TH-immunoreactive neurons in the substantia nigra (SN). This decrease appears 1 day after injection, remains stable for at least 30 days, and is accompanied by a dose-dependent long-lasting decrease in TH- and DA transporter-immunoreactivity in the striatum, which peaked 1 day after treatment and persisted for at least 30 days, however, some recovery was evident from day 3 onwards, evidencing sprouting of TH fibers. No change is observed in the NAc indicating that MDMA causes selective destruction of DA-containing neurons in the nigrostriatal pathway, sparing the mesolimbic pathway. The expression of Mac-1 increased 1 day after MDMA treatment and glial fibrillary acidic protein increased 3 days post-treatment in the striatum and SN but not in the NAc, in strict anatomical correlation with dopaminergic damage. These data provide the first evidence that MDMA causes persistent loss of dopaminergic cell bodies in the SN.  相似文献   

3.
The substantia nigra pars reticulata (SNr) forms a principal output from the basal ganglia. It also receives significant histamine (HA) input from the tuberomammillary nucleus whose functions in SNr remain poorly understood. One identified role is the regulation of serotonin (5-HT) neurotransmission via the HA-H(3) receptor. Here we have explored regulation by another HA receptor expressed in SNr, the H(2)-receptor (H(2)R), by monitoring electrically evoked 5-HT release with fast-scan cyclic voltammetry at carbon-fiber microelectrodes in SNr in rat brain slices. Selective H(2)R antagonists (inverse agonists) ranitidine and tiotidine enhanced 5-HT release while the agonist amthamine suppressed release. The 'neutral' competitive antagonist burimamide alone was without effect but prevented ranitidine actions indicating that inverse agonist effects result from constitutive H(2)R activity independent of HA tone. H(2)R control of 5-HT release was most apparent (from inverse agonist effects) at lower frequencies of depolarization (< or = 20 Hz), and prevailed in the presence of antagonists of GABA, glutamate or H(3)-HA receptors. These data reveal that H(2)Rs in SNr are constitutively active and inhibit 5-HT release through H(2)Rs on 5-HT axons. These data may have therapeutic implications for Parkinson's disease, when SNr HA levels increase, and for neuropsychiatric disorders in which 5-HT is pivotal.  相似文献   

4.
1. In this article we review the studies of memory disabilities in a rat model o Parkinson's disease (PD).2. Intranigral administration of 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP) to rats causes a partial lesion in the substantia nigra, compact part (SNc) and a specific loss of dopamine and its metabolites in the striatum of rats.3. These animals present learning and memory deficits but no sensorimotor impairments, thus modeling the early phase of PD when cognitive impairments are observed but the motor symptoms of the disease are barely present.4. The cognitive deficits observed in these animals affect memory tasks proposed to model habit learning (the cued version of the water maze task and the two-way active avoidance task) and working memory (a working memory version of the water maze), but spare long-term spatial memory (the spatial reference version of the Morris water maze).5. The treatment of these animals with levodopa in a dose that restores the striatal level of dopamine does not reverse these memory impairments, probably because this treatment promotes a high level of dopamine in extrastriatal brain regions, such as the prefrontal cortex and the hippocampus.6. On the other hand, the adenosine receptor antagonist, caffeine, partly reverse the memory impairment effect of SNc lesion in these rats. This effect may be due to caffeine action on nigrostriatal neurons, since it induces dopamine release and modulates the interaction between adenosine and dopamine receptor activity.7. These results suggest that the MPTP SNc-lesioned rats are a good model to study memory disabilities related to PD and that caffeine and other selective A(2A) adenosine receptor antagonists are promising drugs to treat this symptoms in PD patients.  相似文献   

5.
Dopamine (DA) receptors generate many cellular signals and play various roles in locomotion, motivation, hormone production, and drug abuse. According to the location and expression types of the receptors in the brain, DA signals act in either stimulatory or inhibitory manners. Although DA autoreceptors in the substantia nigra pars compacta are known to regulate firing activity, the exact expression patterns and roles of DA autoreceptor types on the firing activity are highly debated. Therefore, we performed individual correlation studies between firing activity and receptor expression patterns using acutely isolated rat substantia nigra pars compacta DA neurons. When we performed single-cell RT-PCR experiments, D(1), D(2)S, D(2)L, D(3), and D(5) receptor mRNA were heterogeneously expressed in the order of D(2)L > D(2)S > D(3) > D(5) > D(1). Stimulation of D(2) receptors with quinpirole suppressed spontaneous firing similarly among all neurons expressing mRNA solely for D(2)S, D(2)L, or D(3) receptors. However, quinpirole most strongly suppressed spontaneous firing in the neurons expressing mRNA for both D(2) and D(3) receptors. These data suggest that D(2) S, D(2)L, and D(3) receptors are able to equally suppress firing activity, but that D(2) and D(3) receptors synergistically suppress firing. This diversity in DA autoreceptors could explain the various actions of DA in the brain.  相似文献   

6.
Glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) improves motor dysfunction associated with aging in rats and non-human primates, in animal models of Parkinson's disease, and may improve motoric function in patients with advanced Parkinson's disease. These improvements are associated with increased dopamine function in the nigrostriatal system, but the molecular events associated with this increase are unknown. In these studies, 100 micro g of GDNF was injected into the striatum of normal aged (24-month-old) male Fischer 344 rats. The protein levels and phosphorylation of TH, ERK1/2, and related proteins were determined by blot-immunolabeling of striatum and substantia nigra harvested 30 days after injection. In GDNF-treated rats, TH phosphorylation at Ser31 increased approximately 40% in striatum and approximately 250% in the substantia nigra. In the substantia nigra, there was a significant increase in ERK1 phosphorylation. In striatum, there was a significant increase in ERK2 phosphorylation. Microdialysis studies in striatum showed that both amphetamine- and potassium-evoked dopamine release in GDNF recipients were significantly increased. These data show that GDNF-induced increases in dopamine function are associated with a sustained increase in TH phosphorylation at Ser31, which is greatest in the substantia nigra and maintained for at least one month following a single striatal administration of GDNF. These findings, taken from the nigrostriatal system of normal aged rats, may help explain the long lasting effects of GDNF on dopamine function and prior studies supporting that a major effect of GDNF involves its effects on dopamine storage and somatodendritic release of dopamine in the substantia nigra.  相似文献   

7.
Recent studies of mouse mutant aphakia have implicated the homeobox gene Pitx3 in the survival of substantia nigra dopaminergic neurons, the degeneration of which causes Parkinson's disease. To directly investigate a role for Pitx3 in midbrain DA neuron development, we have analysed a line of Pitx3-null mice that also carry an eGFP reporter under the control of the endogenous Pitx3 promoter. We show that the lack of Pitx3 resulted in a loss of nascent substantia nigra dopaminergic neurons at the beginning of their final differentiation. Pitx3 deficiency also caused a loss of tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) expression specifically in the substantia nigra neurons. Therefore, our study provides the first direct evidence that the aphakia allele of Pitx3 is a hypomorph and that Pitx3 is required for the regulation of TH expression in midbrain dopaminergic neurons as well as the generation and/or maintenance of these cells. Furthermore, using the targeted GFP reporter as a midbrain dopaminergic lineage marker, we have identified previously unrecognised ontogenetically distinct subpopulations of dopaminergic cells within the ventral midbrain based on their temporal and topographical expression of Pitx3 and TH. Such an expression pattern may provide the molecular basis for the specific dependence of substantia nigra DA neurons on Pitx3.  相似文献   

8.
Galanin (GAL) inhibits midbrain dopamine (DA) activity in several experimental paradigms, yet the mechanism underlying this inhibition is unclear. We examined the effects of GAL on the expression of tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) in primary cultures of rat embryonic (E14) ventral mesencephalon (VM). One micromolar GAL had no effect on the number of TH-immunoreactive (ir) neurons in VM cultures. However, 1 micro m GAL reduced an approximately 100% increase in TH-ir neurons in 1 mm dibutyryl cAMP (dbcAMP)-treated cultures by approximately 50%. TH-ir neuron number in dbcAMP-treated VM cultures was dose-responsive to GAL and the GAL receptor antagonist M40 blocked GAL effects. Semi-quantitative RT-PCR and quantitative immunoblotting experiments revealed that GAL had no effect on TH mRNA levels in VM cultures but reduced TH protein. VM cultures expressed GALR1, GALR2, and GALR3 receptor mRNA. However, dbcAMP treatment resulted in a specific approximately 200% increase in GALR1 mRNA. GALR1 activity is linked to a pertussis toxin (PTX)-sensitive opening of G protein-gated K+ channels (GIRKs). GAL reduction of TH-ir neuron number in dbcAMP + GAL-treated cultures was sensitive to both PTX and tertiapin, a GIRK inhibitor. GAL inhibition of midbrain DA activity may involve a GALR1- mediated reduction of TH in midbrain dopaminergic neurons.  相似文献   

9.
Dopamine (DA) neurons release DA not only from axon terminals at the striatum, but from their somata and dendrites at the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc). Released DA may auto-regulate further DA release or modulate non-DA cells. However, the actual mechanism of somatodendritic DA release, especially the Ca2+ dependency of the process, remains controversial. In this study, we used amperometry to monitor DA release from somata of acutely isolated rat DA neurons. We found that DA neurons spontaneously released DA in the resting state. Removal of extracellular Ca2+ and application of blockers for voltage-operated Ca2+ channels (VOCCs) suppressed the frequency of secretion events. Activation of VOCCs by stimulation with K+-rich saline increased the frequency of secretion events, which were also sensitive to blockers for L- and T-type Ca2+ channels. These results suggest that Ca2+ influx through VOCCs regulates DA release from somata of DA neurons.  相似文献   

10.
Human alpha-synuclein was identified on the basis of proteolytic fragments derived from senile plaques of Alzheimer's disease, and it is the locus of mutations in some familial forms of Parkinson's disease. Its normal function and whether it may play a direct role in neural degeneration remain unknown. To explore cellular responses to neural degeneration in the dopamine neurons of the substantia nigra, we have developed a rodent model of apoptotic death induced by developmental injury to their target, the striatum. We find by mRNA differential display that synuclein is up-regulated in this model, and thus it provides an opportunity to examine directly whether synuclein plays a role in the death of these neurons or, alternatively, in compensatory responses. Up-regulation of mRNA is associated with an increase in the number of neuronal profiles immunostained for synuclein protein. At a cellular level, synuclein is almost exclusively expressed in normal neurons, rather than apoptotic profiles. Synuclein is up-regulated throughout normal postnatal development of substantia nigra neurons, but it is not further up-regulated during periods of natural cell death. We conclude that up-regulation of synuclein in the target injury model is unlikely to mediate apoptotic death and propose that it may be due to a compensatory response in neurons destined to survive.  相似文献   

11.
Compensatory mechanisms in dopamine (DA) signaling have long been proposed to delay onset of locomotor symptoms during Parkinson's disease progression until ~ 80% loss of striatal DA occurs. Increased striatal dopamine turnover has been proposed to be a part of this compensatory response, but may occur after locomotor symptoms. Increased tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) activity has also been proposed as a mechanism, but the impact of TH protein loss upon site‐specific TH phosphorylation in conjunction with the impact on DA tissue content is not known. The tissue content of DA was determined against TH protein loss in the striatum and substantia nigra (SN) following 6‐hydroxydopamine lesion in the medial forebrain bundle in young Sprague–Dawley male rats. Although DA predictably decreased in both regions following 6‐hydroxydopamine, there was a significant difference in DA loss between the striatum (75%) and SN (40%), despite similar TH protein loss. Paradoxically, there was a significant decrease in DA against remaining TH protein in striatum, but a significant increase in DA against remaining TH in SN. In the SN, increased DA per remaining TH protein was matched by increased ser31, but not ser40, TH phosphorylation. In striatum, both ser31 and ser40 phosphorylation decreased, reflecting decreased DA per TH. However, in control nigral and striatal tissue, only ser31 phosphorylation correlated with DA per TH protein. Combined, these results suggest that the phosphorylation of ser31 in the SN may be a mechanism to increase DA biosynthesis against TH protein loss in an in vivo model of Parkinson's disease.

  相似文献   


12.
Tyrosine hydroxylase activity was assayed in microdissected substantia nigra and striata from seven strains of mice (BALB, CBA, YBR, WB, IS, MOLG, and CAST). In the substantia nigra where tyrosine hydroxylase activity is thought to be proportional to dopaminergic neuron number, only CBA had a different (lower) enzyme activity compared with BALB. However in the striatum, tyrosine hydroxylase activity was larger for IS, MOLG and CAST compared with BALB. Further investigation of the CAST striatum showed that dopamine content and dopamine uptake activity were also higher in comparison with BALB. All three dopaminergic parameters were larger because of lower protein levels in the CAST striatum. A lower absolute amount of glutamic acid decarboxylase activity in CAST versus BALB striatum was consistent with the possibility of a smaller CAST striatum. In contrast to dopamine, the serotonin content in CAST striatum was reduced in proportion to the decrease in protein content. We suggest that the CAST striatum is smaller than BALB striatum and is innervated by proportionally fewer serotoninergic terminals, but the amount of dopaminergic innervation of the CAST striatum is not altered by the size of the target.  相似文献   

13.
Parkinson's disease (PD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder characterized by the loss of dopamine neurons of the nigrostriatal system, resulting in severe motor disturbances. Although much less appreciated, non-motor symptoms are also very common in PD and many can be traced to serotonin neuronal deficits. Tryptophan hydroxylase (TPH) 2, the rate-limiting enzyme in the serotonin biosynthesis, is a phenotypic marker for serotonin neurons and is known to be extremely labile to oxidation. Therefore, the oxidative processes that prevail in PD could cause TPH2 misfolding and modify serotonin neuronal function much as is seen in dopamine neurons. Oxidation of TPH2 inhibits enzyme activity and leads to the formation of high molecular weight aggregates in a dithiothreitol-reversible manner. Cysteine-scanning mutagenesis shows that as long as a single cysteine residue (out of a total of 13 per monomer) remains in TPH2, it cross-links upon oxidation and only cysteine-less mutants are resistant to this effect. The effects of oxidants on TPH2 catalytic function and cross-linking are also observed in intact TPH2-expressing HEK293 cells. Oxidation shifts TPH2 from the soluble compartment into membrane fractions and large inclusion bodies. Sequential non-reducing/reducing 2-dimensional sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and immunoblotting confirmed that TPH2 was one of a small number of cytosolic proteins that form disulfide-bonded aggregates. The propensity of TPH2 to misfold upon oxidation of its cysteine residues is responsible for its catalytic lability and may be related to loss of serotonin neuronal function in PD and the emergence of non-motor (psychiatric) symptoms.  相似文献   

14.
Previous reports have shown that among the markers for the nigro-striatal dopamine (DA) system measured in the striatum, dopamine uptake seems to be more severely affected than the others in the weaver mutant mouse. In the present study we examined DA levels, tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) activity, and high-affinity DA uptake to determine if the DA uptake is most affected when all the measurements are made in the same striatal homogenate in the same laboratory. We found that the DA uptake activity was most altered (93% lower) compared to DA levels (68% lower) and TH activity (64% lower). The DA uptake was so low in the weaver that we could not obtain reliable kinetic parameters. For TH activity we found that the Vmax was 36% lower while the Km forl-tyrosine was 92% higher in the weaver striatum. This lower affinity for substrate suggests that the TH enzyme itself may be altered in the nigro-striatal system of the weaver mutant mouse.Special issue dedicated to Dr. Morris H. Aprison.  相似文献   

15.
16.
The induction of ischemic tolerance by preconditioning provides a platform to elucidate endogenous mechanisms of stroke protection. In these studies, we characterize the relationship between hypoxia‐inducible factor (HIF), sphingosine kinase 2 (SphK2), and chemokine (C–C motif) ligand 2 (CCL2) in models of hypoxic or pharmacological preconditioning‐induced ischemic tolerance. A genetics‐based approach using SphK2‐ and CCL2‐null mice showed both SphK2 and CCL2 to be necessary for the induction of ischemic tolerance following preconditioning with hypoxia, the hypoxia‐mimetic cobalt chloride, or the sphingosine‐1‐phosphate (S1P) agonist FTY720. A pharmacological approach confirmed the necessity of HIF signaling for all three preconditioning stimuli, and showed that the SphK/S1P pathway transduces tolerance via the S1P1 receptor. In addition, our data suggest significant cross‐talk between HIF and SphK2‐produced S1P signaling, which together act to up‐regulate CCL2 expression. Overall, HIF, SphK, S1P, and CCL2 participate in a signaling cascade to induce the gene expression responsible for the stroke‐tolerant phenotype established by hypoxic and FTY720 preconditioning. The identification of these common molecular mediators involved in signaling the genomic response to multiple preconditioning stimuli provides several targets for therapeutic manipulation.  相似文献   

17.
18.
19.
Evidence suggests that increased glutamatergic input to the substantia nigra pars compacta as a result of hyperactivity of subthalalmic nucleus output pathways may contribute to the progressive degeneration of nigral dopaminergic neurones in Parkinson's disease (PD), a debilitating neurodegenerative disorder which affects approximately 1% of people aged over 65. Substantial electrophysiological evidence suggests that the excitation of nigral dopaminergic neurones is regulated by the activation of Group I metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluR), comprising mGluR1 and mGluR5 subtypes. As activation of these receptors by endogenous glutamate may promote multiple cascades leading to excitotoxic neuronal death, it may be hypothesised that functional antagonism of Group I mGluR should be neuroprotective and could form the basis of a novel neuroprotective treatment for PD. To investigate this hypothesis, the neuroprotective potential of the selective competitive mGlu1 antagonist (+)-2-methyl-4-carboxyphenylglycine ((S)-(+)-alpha-amino-4-carboxy-2-methlybenzeneacetic acid; LY367385) and the selective allosteric mGlu5 antagonist 2-methyl-6-(phenylethynyl)-pyridine (MPEP) was tested in a rodent 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) model of PD in vivo. Both acute and subchronic intranigral administration of either LY367385 or MPEP resulted in significant neuroprotection of nigral tyrosine hydroxylase immunoreactive cell bodies, which correlated closely with prevention of striatal monoamine depletion following 6-OHDA lesioning. This neuroprotective action of LY367385 and MPEP displayed a clear concentration-dependent effect, suggesting a receptor-mediated mechanism of action. LY367385 produced robust neuroprotection at all concentrations tested (40, 200 and 1000 nmol in 4 microL), whilst MPEP displayed a bell-shaped neuroprotective profile with significant neuroprotection at low concentrations (2 and 10 nmol in 4 microL) but not at higher concentrations (50 nmol). Importantly, subchronic intranigral administration of MPEP and LY367385 appeared to slow the degeneration of remaining nigral dopaminergic neurones and prevented further striatal dopamine depletion in animals with established 6-OHDA induced nigrostriatal lesions, suggesting that these compounds may significantly influence disease progression in this model.  相似文献   

20.
Beta-carbolines have been suggested to be involved in the pathogenesis of Parkinson's disease as a result of their structural similarity to the neurotoxin N -methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP). The chloral-derived beta-carboline derivative 1-trichloromethyl-1,2,3,4-tetrahydro-beta-carboline (TaClo) causes cell loss in neuronal and glial cell cultures and induces a slowly developing neurodegenerative process in rats. In our experiments, effects of TaClo and its derivatives 2-methyl-TaClo (2-Me-TaClo), and 1-dichloromethylene-1,2,3,4-tetrahydro-beta-carboline (1-CCl(2) -THbetaC) on tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) activity were investigated in TH assays using homogenate preparations of the rat nucleus accumbens and recombinant human TH (hTH1). TH activity was determined in vitro by measuring l-DOPA production with HPLC-ECD. Using homogenate preparations, TaClo, 2-Me-TaClo, and 1-CCl(2) -THbetaC inhibited TH in concentrations of 0.1 mm, while 1-CCl(2) -THbetaC in low concentrations enhanced TH activity. When TH was activated by PACAP-27, TaClo, 2-Me-TaClo, or 1-CCl(2) -THbetaC also inhibited activated enzyme activity in high concentrations. However, in the case of 2-Me-TaClo and 1-CCl(2) -THbetaC a biphasic effect was observed with a marked increase of TH activity in the nanomolar range. In our experiments using recombinant hTH1, TaClo, 2-Me-TaClo, or 1-CCl(2) -THbetaC did not modify enzyme activity. After activation of hTH1 by PKA all the tetrahydro-beta-carbolines investigated in this study decreased l-DOPA formation. We suggest that these beta-carbolines modulate dopamine synthesis by interacting with a protein kinase TH-activating system.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号