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Neurotrophic Effects of l-DOPA in Postnatal Midbrain Dopamine Neuron/Cortical Astrocyte Cocultures
Authors:† Maria Angeles Mena  Viviana Davila  David Sulzer
Institution:Departments of Neurology and Psychiatry, Columbia University and Department of Neuroscience, New York State Psychiatric Institute, New York, New York, U.S.A.;and; Departamento de Investigación, Hospital Ramón y Cajal, Madrid, Spain
Abstract:Abstract: l -DOPA is toxic to catecholamine neurons in culture, but the toxicity is reduced by exposure to astrocytes. We tested the effect of l -DOPA on dopamine neurons using postnatal ventral midbrain neuron/cortical astrocyte cocultures in serum-free, glia-conditioned medium. l -DOPA (50 µ M ) protected against dopamine neuronal cell death and increased the number and branching of dopamine processes. In contrast to embryonically derived glia-free cultures, where l -DOPA is toxic, postnatal midbrain cultures did not show toxicity at 200 µ M l -DOPA. The stereoisomer d -DOPA (50–400 µ M ) was not neurotrophic. The aromatic amino acid decarboxylase inhibitor carbidopa (25 µ M ) did not block the neurotrophic effect. These data suggest that the neurotrophic effect of l -DOPA is stereospecific but independent of the production of dopamine. However, l -DOPA increased the level of glutathione. Inhibition of glutathione peroxidase by l -buthionine sulfoximine (3 µ M for 24 h) blocked the neurotrophic action of L-DOPA. N -Acetyl- l -cysteine (250 µ M for 48 h), which promotes glutathione synthesis, had a neurotrophic effect similar to that of l -DOPA. These data suggest that the neurotrophic effect of l -DOPA may be mediated, at least in part, by elevation of glutathione content.
Keywords:l-DOPA  Glia  Glutathione  Parkinson's disease  Dopamine neurons
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