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Studies on the striatal dopamine uptake system of weaver mutant mice and effects of ventral mesencephalic grafts
Authors:L. C. Triarhou  E. H. Stotz  W. C. Low  J. Norton  B. Ghetti  B. Landwehrmeyer  J. M. Palacios  J. R. Simon
Affiliation:(1) Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine (Laboratory of Cellular and Molecular Neuropathology), Indiana University School of Medicine, Medical Science Building A-142, 46202 Indianapolis, Indiana;(2) Department of Psychiatry (Institute of Psychiatric Research), Indiana University School of Medicine, Medical Science Building A-142, 46202 Indianapolis, Indiana;(3) Department of Medical and Molecular Genetics, Indiana University School of Medicine, Medical Science Building A-142, 46202 Indianapolis, Indiana;(4) Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Indiana University School of Medicine, Medical Science Building A-142, 46202 Indianapolis, Indiana;(5) Department of Program in Medical Neurobiology, Indiana University School of Medicine, Medical Science Building A-142, 46202 Indianapolis, Indiana;(6) Departments of Neurosurgery and Physiology, and Program in Neuroscience, University of Minnesota Medical School, 55455 Minneapolis, Minnesota;(7) Institut für Pathologie der Universität Basel, CH-4003 Basel, Switzerland;(8) Laboratorios Almirall, S. A., Research Institute, E-08024 Barcelona, Spain
Abstract:The dopamine (DA) uptake system was investigated in the mesostriatal system of normal and weaver mutant mice, which lose mesencephalic DA neurons, as well as in weaver mutants with ventral mesencephalic grafts to the striatum. Assays of [3H]DA uptake in striatal synaptosomal fractions in vitro and autoradiography of [3H]mazindol binding in brain sections were carried out in wild-type mice (+/+) and in the two hemispheres of homozygous weaver mutants (wv/wv) that had received unilateral grafts of mesencephalic cell suspensions to the right side. Net [3H]DA uptake, expressed as pmol/mg-protein/2-min, was on the average 50.6 in the striatum of wild-type mice, 7.9 in the non-grafted, and 10.1 in the transplanted striatum of weaver mutants. [3]DA uptake in wild-type mice differed significantly from both the grafted and non-grafted weaver striata (P<0.001). Paired comparisons for [3H]DA uptake between right and left sides of recipient weaver mice showed a significant side effect (P<0.02), the right side being 28–38% higher than the left side [mean of all individual (R-L)/L values]. The results of amphetamine-induced turning behavior tests were compared with the biochemical findings. Mice with grafts to the right side rotated an average of 22 turns to the left and 7 turns to the right during the five one-minute sessions; the mean value L/(L+R) was 64%. A plot of (L-R) rotations against (R-L) [3H]DA uptake gave a correlation coefficient of 0.552 (P<0.05), indicating that animals with a strong rotational bias to the left tended to have higher [3H]DA on the right. Similarly, the animals that were used for [3H]mazindol binding autoradiographic studies displayed on the average 72% rotations to the left side. In the [3H]mazindol binding data, non-grafted weaver mutants showed the severest depletion relative to wild-type in the dorsomedial and dorsolateral caudate-putamen (86% and 87%, respectively). Mice with unilateral grafts to the right side showed an increase in [3H]mazindol binding signal in the transplanted side of 40–64% (depending on dorsoventral topography) over the contralateral, non-grafted side. These findings attest to the functional effects of the grafts at the anatomical, biochemical, and behavioral levels. The parallel measurements of motor performance and DA uptake in the same animals offers an index of behavioral recovery as a function of transmitter-related activity. Furthermore, by conducting measurements of the synaptosomal DA uptake in vitro and of the binding characteristics of mazindol in brain slices by autoradiography, one has the advantage of combining the anatomical resolution of uptake site visualization with a dynamic indicator of function for DA uptake in the nerve terminal.Special issue dedicated to Professor Sidney Ochs
Keywords:Dopamine uptake carrier system  mazindol binding autoradiography  neostriatum  neural graft  mouse, neurological mutant  weaver
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