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Publication
Journal: Behavioural Brain Research
March/20/2020
Abstract
The globus pallidus (GP) has an important role in the flow of information between input and output structures of the basal ganglia (BG) circuit. For example, the GP participates in motor control symptoms of Parkinson's disease (PD). Since the GP receives dopaminergic innervation from the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc), a local dopamine (DA) deficit could possibly be related to the cognitive and emotional alterations of PD as well. The aim of this study was to examine the effects of lesions in the GP (induced by 6-OHDA) on anxiety, depression and ambulation in rats. Such lesions are known to reduce dopaminergic innervation in this brain structure. Additionally, the effect on DA receptors in the GP was tested by local administration of the dopamine agonist PD168,077, antagonist haloperidol and psychostimulant amphetamine. Experimental anxiety was evaluated with the elevated plus maze (EPM), burying behavior test (BBT) and social interaction test, while depressive-like behavior was assessed with the sucrose preference test. Rats with unilateral and bilateral lesions showed higher levels of anxiety than intact animals in both the EPM and BBT, an effect also obtained after intrapallidal injection of haloperidol. The administration of methamphetamine or PD-168.077 caused the opposite effect. The dopaminergic lesions in the GP did not affect sucrose preference, social interaction or ambulation. These data show that dopamine in the GP, acting through D2 or D4 receptors, may be involved in the manifestation of anxiety, a non-motor symptom of PD that often appears before motor symptoms.
Publication
Journal: Inorganic Chemistry
July/28/2004
Abstract
The bis-phenyltin-substituted, lone-pair-containing tungstoarsenate [(C(6)H(5)Sn)(2)As(2)W(19)O(67)(H(2)O)](8)(-) (1) has been synthesized and characterized by multinuclear NMR, IR, and elemental analysis. Single-crystal X-ray analysis was carried out on (NH(4))(7)Na[(C(6)H(5)Sn)(2)As(2)W(19)O(67)(H(2)O)].17.5H(2)O (NH(4)(-1), which crystallizes in the monoclinic system, space group P2(1)/c, with a = 18.3127(17) A, b = 24.403(2) A, c = 22.965(2) A, beta = 106.223(2) degrees, and Z = 4. Polyanion 1 consists of two B-alpha-(As(III)W(9)O(33)) Keggin moieties linked via a WO(H(2)O) fragment and two SnC(6)H(5) groups leading to a sandwich-type structure with nominal C(2)(v) symmetry. Polyanion 1 is stable in solution as indicated by the expected 6-line pattern (4:4:4:4:2:1) in (183)W NMR and the expected (119)Sn, (13)C, and (1)H NMR spectra. Synthesis of 1 was accomplished by reaction of C(6)H(5)SnCl(3) and K(14)[As(2)W(19)O(67)(H(2)O)] in a 2:1 molar ratio in aqueous acidic medium (pH 2). In the solid-state structure of NH(4)(-1, neighboring polyanions are weakly bound via W-O-Na bonds leading to chains which interact with each other via the phenyl rings resulting in a 2-D assembly.
Publication
Journal: Restorative Neurology and Neuroscience
October/5/2017
Abstract
The present work examines α-synuclein expression in the nigrostriatal system of a rat chronic hepatic encephalopathy model induced by portacaval anastomosis (PCA). There is evidence that dopaminergic dysfunction in disease conditions is strongly associated with such expression. Possible relationships among dopaminergic neurons, astroglial cells and α-synuclein expression were sought.
Brain tissue samples from rats at 1 and 6 months post-PCA, and controls, were analysed immunohistochemically using antibodies against tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), α-synuclein, glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) and ubiquitin (Ub).
In the control rats, TH immunoreactivity was detected in the neuronal cell bodies and processes in the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc). A dense TH-positive network of neurons was also seen in the striatum. In the PCA-exposed rats, however, a reduction in TH-positive neurons was seen at both 1 and 6 months in the SNc, as well as a reduction in TH-positive fibres in the striatum. This was coincident with the appearance of α-synuclein-immunoreactive neurons in the SNc; some of the TH-positive neurons also showed α-synuclein immunoreactivity. In addition, α-synuclein accumulation was seen in the SNc and striatum at both 1 and 6 months post-PCA, whereas α-synuclein was only mildly expressed in the nigrostriatal pathway of the controls. Astrogliosis was also seen following PCA, as revealed by increased GFAP expression from 1 month to 6 months post-PCA in both the SN and striatum. The astroglial activation level in the SN paralleled the reduced neuronal expression of TH throughout PCA exposure.
α-synuclein accumulation following PCA may induce dopaminergic dysfunction via the downregulation of TH, as well as astroglial activation.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Neuroinflammation
May/3/2017
Abstract
The majority of Parkinson's disease (PD) cases are sporadic and idiopathic suggesting that this neurodegenerative disorder is the result of both environmental and genetic factors. Stress and neuroinflammation are among the factors being investigated for their possible contributions to PD. Experiments in rodents showed that severe chronic stress can reduce the number of dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc); the same cells that are lost in PD. These actions are at least in part mediated by increased oxidative stress. Here, we tested the hypothesis that the interleukin-13 receptor alpha 1 (IL-13Rα1), a cytokine receptor whose activation increases the vulnerability of dopaminergic neurons to oxidative damage, participates in the stress-dependent damage of these neurons.
Mice were subject to daily sessions of 8 h (acute) stress for 16 weeks (5 days a week), a procedure previously showed to induce loss of dopaminergic neurons in the SNc. The source and the kinetics of interleukin-13 (IL-13), the endogenous ligand of IL-13Rα1, were evaluated 0, 1, 3, 6, and 8 h and at 16 weeks of stress. Identification of IL-13 producing cell-type was performed by immunofluorescent and by in situ hybridization experiments. Markers of oxidative stress, microglia activation, and the number of dopaminergic neurons in IL-13Rα1 knock-out animals (Il13ra1 Y/ - ) and their wild-type littermates (Il13ra1 Y/+ ) were evaluated at 16 weeks of stress and at 20 weeks, following a 4 week non-stressed period and compared to non-stressed mice.
IL-13 was expressed in microglial cells within the SN and in a fraction of the tyrosine hydroxylase-positive neurons in the SNc. IL-13 levels were elevated during daily stress and peaked at 6 h. 16 weeks of chronic restraint stress significantly reduced the number of SNc dopaminergic neurons in Il13ra1 Y/+ mice. Neuronal loss at 16 weeks was significantly lower in Il13ra1 Y/- mice. However, the loss of dopaminergic neurons measured at 20 weeks, after 4 weeks of non-stress following the 16 weeks of stress, was similar in Il13ra1 Y/+ and Il13ra1 Y/- mice.
IL-13, a cytokine previously demonstrated to increase the susceptibility of SNc dopaminergic neurons to oxidative stress, is elevated in the SN by restraint stress. Lack of IL-13Rα1 did not prevent nor halted but delayed neuronal loss in the mouse model of chronic restraint stress. IL-13/IL-13Rα1 may represent a target to reduce the rate of DA neuronal loss that can occur during severe chronic restraint stress.
Publication
Journal: ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters
April/18/2019
Abstract
The oxidative degeneration of dopamine-releasing (DAergic) neurons in the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc) has attracted much interest in preclinical research, due to its involvement in Parkinson's disease manifestations. Evidence exists on the participation of quinone derivatives in mitochondrial dysfunction, alpha synuclein protein aggregation, and protein degradation. With the aim to investigate the role of L-DOPA-quinone in DAergic neuron functions, we synthesized L-DOPA-quinone by use of 2-iodoxybenzoic acid and measured its activity in recovery from dopamine-mediated firing inhibition of SNc neurons. Noteworthy, L-DOPA-quinone counteracts firing inhibition in SNc DAergic neurons caused by GIRK opening. A possible mechanism to explain the effect of L-DOPA-quinone on GIRK channel has been proposed by computational models. Overall, the study showed the possibility that L-DOPA-quinone stabilizes GIRK in a preopen conformation through formation of a covalent adduct with cysteine-65 on the GIRK2 subunit of the protein.
Publication
Journal: Revista de Neurologia
October/19/2014
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
To investigate the effect of erythropoietin in cultured rat cerebral cortex cells receiving radiotherapy.
METHODS
Cerebral cortex was taken from 17-day-old Wistar rat embryos and placed in culture. At 72 hours, the cultures were divided into two groups, one receiving 30 pM erythropoietin alpha and the other was the control group. Both groups received 6 Gy from a Phoenix apparatus and were incubated for another 24 hours before fixation in 4% formaldehyde. TUNEL technique was employed to calculate the number of apoptotic cells in the irradiated cultures.
RESULTS
Apoptosis affected 25.22% of the cells cultured without erythropoietin and 15.5% in the group receiving erithropoyetin. Student's t-test was used to analyse quantitative variables and showed a significant difference in apoptosis between the two groups (p < 0.0001).
CONCLUSIONS
Our in vitro experimental model demonstrated that erythropoietin effectively prevents apoptosis in irradiated rat SNC cells, opening new fields for investigation into protective agents for the nervous system.
Publication
Journal: Neuroscience
December/16/2001
Abstract
Detailed electrophysiological characterisation of spinal opioid receptors in the mouse has been limited due to various technical difficulties. In this study, extracellular single unit recordings were made from dorsal horn neurones in a perfused spinal cord with attached trunk-hindquarter to investigate the role of delta-opioid receptor in mediating nociceptive and non-nociceptive transmission in mouse. Noxious electrical shock, pinch and heat stimuli evoked a mean response of 20.8+/-2.5 (n=10, P<0.005), 30.1+/-5.4 (n=58, P<0.005) and 40.9+/-6.3 (n=29, P<0.005) spikes per stimulus respectively. In 5 of 22 cells, repetitive noxious electrical stimuli applied to the hindpaw for 20 s produced a progressive increase in spike number, the phenomenon known as 'wind-up' and/or hyperactivity. When the selective delta-opioid receptor agonist (+)-4-[(alpha R)-alpha-((2S,5R)-4-allyl-2,5-dimethyl-1-piperazinyl)-3-methoxybenzyl]-N,N-diethylbenzamide (SNC 80) was perfused for 8-10 min, these evoked nociceptive responses were reversibly depressed. SNC 80 (2 microM) depressed the nociceptive responses evoked by electrical shock, pinch and heat by 74.0+/-13.7% (n=8, P<0.01), 66.5+/-16.6% (n=10, P<0.01) and 74.1+/-17.0% (n=10, P<0.01) respectively. The maximum depression by 5 microM SNC 80 was 92.6+/-6.8% (n=3). SNC 80 at 5 microM also completely abolished the wind-up and/or hypersensitivity (n=5). The depressant effects of SNC 80 on the nociceptive responses were completely blocked by 10 microM naloxone (n=5) and 3 microM 17-(cyclopropylmethyl)-6,7-dehydro-4,5 alpha-epoxy-14 beta-ethoxy-5 beta-methylindolo [2',3':6',7'] morphinan-3-ol hydrochloride (HS 378, n=8), a novel highly selective delta-opioid receptor antagonist. Interestingly, HS 378 (3 microM) itself potentiated the background activity and evoked responses to pinch and heat by 151.8+/-38.4% (P<0.05, n=8), 34.2+/-6.1% (P<0.01, n=7) and 45.5+/-11.8% (P<0.05, n=5) respectively. In contrast, the responses of non-nociceptive dorsal horn neurones were not inhibited by SNC 80 at a dose of up to 10 microM (n=5). These data demonstrate that delta-opioid receptor modulate nociceptive, but not non-nociceptive, transmission in spinal dorsal horn neurones of the adult mouse. The potentiation of neuronal activity by HS 378 may reflect an autoregulatory role of the endogenous delta-opioid in nociceptive transmission in mouse.
Publication
Journal: Experimental Brain Research
February/28/2001
Abstract
To compare the expression of GABAA receptor subunits in the normal substantia nigra and in fetal mesencephalic neurons ectopically transplanted into the dopamine-depleted striatum, we have employed single and double immunocytochemical approaches using tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) and alpha 1, alpha 2, alpha 3, and beta 2/3 GABAA receptor subunit specific antibodies. In the substantia nigra, alpha 1 and beta 2/3 GABAA receptor subunits were labeled in processes in the pars compacta (SNc) and, more intensely, in both somata and processes in the pars reticulata (SNr). There was no clear TH and alpha 1 or beta 2/3 colocalization, with the exception of some TH-immunoreactive (-ir) neurons that showed a weak immunoreactivity for beta 2/3. Sections immunolabeled for alpha 2 showed a faint diffuse labeling for this subunit both in the SNr and in the SNc. Scattered somata were immunopositive for alpha 2, and some of them were also TH-ir. The labeling for alpha 3 and TH showed that TH-positive neurons expressed intense alpha 3 immunoreactivity, although some TH-negative somata in the SNr expressed weak alpha 3 immunoreactivity. In the transplants, double immunostaining procedures showed that the labeling for alpha 1 or beta 2/3 appeared particularly concentrated in patches of intensely immunoreactive neuronal processes that surrounded TH-ir cells, but these processes were not TH-ir. In the case of alpha 2, diffuse immunostaining was observed all over the graft, with some scattered positive somata. Only a few of them were also TH positive. Sections immunoreacted for alpha 3 and TH revealed that TH-ir neurons expressed intense alpha 3 immunoreactivity, and that only a few TH-negative neurons were weakly positive for alpha 3. These results show that mesencephalic tissue ectopically grafted into the striatum develops a pattern of GABAA receptor expression similar to that normally expressed in situ, and particularly that the grafted dopaminergic neurons express similar GABAA receptors, including the alpha 3 subunit. This might be due to the similarity of GABAergic afferents to these neurons in the SNc and the graft, or that at the time of transplantation this expression had already been determined.
Publication
Journal: Aging and Disease
July/4/2021
Abstract
Parkinson's disease (PD) is the second most common neurodegenerative disorder in the aging population and is characterized by a constellation of motor and non-motor symptoms. The abnormal aggregation and spread of alpha-synuclein (α-syn) is thought to underlie the loss of dopaminergic (DA) neurons in the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc), leading to the development of PD. It is in this context that the use of adeno-associated viruses (AAVs) to express a-syn in the rodent midbrain has become a popular tool to model SNc DA neuron loss during PD. In this review, we summarize results from two decades of experiments using AAV-mediated a-syn expression in rodents to model PD. Specifically, we outline aspects of AAV vectors that are particularly relevant to modeling a-syn dysfunction in rodent models of PD such as changes in striatal neurochemistry, a-syn biochemistry, and PD-related behaviors resulting from AAV-mediated a-syn expression in the midbrain. Finally, we discuss the emerging role of astrocytes in propagating a-syn pathology, and point to future directions for employing AAVs as a tool to better understand how astrocytes contribute to a-syn pathology during the development of PD. We envision that lessons learned from two decades of utilizing AAVs to express a-syn in the rodent brain will enable us to develop an optimized set of parameters for gaining a better understanding of how a-syn leads to the development of PD.
Keywords: Parkinson’s disease; alpha-synuclein; dopaminergic; model.
Publication
Journal: Talanta
September/14/2020
Abstract
In this work, an assay with high sensitivity and selectivity for the detection of formaldehyde (FA) is presented. The assay applied a gold nanoprism/Tollens' reagent (Au-np/TR) complex as the sensor used in headspace single-drop microextraction (HS-SDME). A surface plasmon resonance signal enhancement as well as color change was caused by the formation of Au@Ag-np after a redox reaction between FA and TR during the HS-SDME process. With the utilization of smartphone nanocolorimetry (SNC), the FA could be detected and quantified. For HS-SDME-SNC, a linearity calibration curve ranging from 0.1 to 100 μM was obtained, and the limit of detection was determined to be 30 nM. Successful attempts to determine FA were demonstrated by analysis of the analyte in (adulterated) raw food samples (octopus and chicken flesh). Matrix effects from real samples were avoided by using HS-SDME, and only a 3-μL droplet of solvent was needed in the assay.
<strong cl<em>a</em>ss="sub-title"> Keywords: </strong> Form<em>a</em>ldehyde; Gold n<em>a</em>noprism; He<em>a</em>dsp<em>a</em>ce single-drop microextr<em>a</em>ction; Sm<em>a</em>rtphone n<em>a</em>nocolorimetry; Tollens' re<em>a</em>gent.
Publication
Journal: Phytomedicine
September/12/2020
Abstract
Background: Neurodegenerative diseases (NDDs) are primarily characterized by selective neuronal loss in the brain. Alzheimer's disease as the most common NDDs and the most prevalent cause of dementia is characterized by Amyloid-beta deposition, which leads to cognitive and memory impairment. Parkinson's disease is a progressive neurodegenerative disease characterized by the dramatic death of dopaminergic neuronal cells, especially in the SNc and caused alpha-synuclein accumulation in the neurons. Silymarin, an extract from seeds of Silybum marianum, administered mostly for liver disorders and also had anti-oxidant and anti-carcinogenic activities.
Purpose: The present comprehensive review summarizes the beneficial effects of Silymarin in-vivo and in-vitro and even in animal models for these NDDs.
Methods: A diagram model for systematic review is utilized for this search. The research is conducted in the following databases: PubMed, Web of Science, Scopus, and Science Direct.
Results: Based on the inclusion criteria, 83 studies were selected and discussed in this review.
Conclusion: Lastly, we review the latest experimental evidences supporting the potential effects of Silymarin, as a neuroprotective agent in NDDs.
Keywords: Alzheimer's disease; Cerebral ischemia; Neurodegenerative diseases; Parkinson's disease; Silymarin.
Publication
Journal: Pflugers Archiv European Journal of Physiology
April/6/1998
Abstract
Glutamate-mediated excitotoxicity plays an important role in the degeneration of nigrostriatal dopamine (DA) neurons induced by 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP), although the role of the N-methyl D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor subtype in this process is still uncertain. We studied glutamate receptor subtype agonist-induced ionic currents in acutely dissociated DAergic neurons from the rat substantia nigra zona compacta (SNc) using the nystatin-perforated patch-clamp whole-cell recording technique. The results fall into four main categories. First, single neurons, freshly isolated from SNc, exhibited a large soma and multipolar morphology, responded to DA, and stained positively for tyrosine hydroxylase (TH). Second, rapid application of L-glutamate >> 10(-5) M) induced an inward current with minimal desensitization at a clamp voltage of -60 mV. Third, kainic acid (KA) or alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-isoxazole (AMPA) induced an inward current that was similar to the glutamate-induced current while, in the same neuron, NMDA (10(-4) M) failed to induce any current response in Mg2+-free solution that contained 10(-5) M glycine at a clamp voltage of -60 mV. Under the same experimental conditions, NMDA induced a clear current response in isolated substantia nigra reticulata (SNr) neurons. Fourth, the specific NMDA receptor antagonist DL-2-amino-5-phosphonovaleric acid (APV, 10(-4) M) failed to block 10(-4) M glutamate-induced inward current, while the specific KA/AMPA receptor antagonist 6-cyano-7-nitroguinoxaline-2, 3-dione (CNQX, 10(-5) M) completely blocked the glutamate-induced current. These results indicate that in single SNc DAergic neurons of 2-week-old rats, L-glutamate-induced inward current is mediated by non-NMDA receptors rather than by NMDA receptors.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Nanoscience and Nanotechnology
March/14/2021
Abstract
The purpose of this study is to investigate the surface activity of starch nanocrystals (SNC), material derived from starch, and confirm their usefulness as a surfactant. In order to evaluate the surface activity, the surface tension change of suspended SNC solution via the Wilhelmy plate method was measured and the values were compared with various synthetic surfactants. The effect of SNC as emulsifier was evaluated on emulsion formation and physical stability. The surface tension of the SNC-dispersed solution was decreased while its concentration was increased. When the 5.0% (w/v) of SNC was added, the surface tension was decreased from 70.3 to 49.5 mN/m. It was confirmed that the physical stability of the emulsion prepared by adding the SNC was improved compared to that of surface inactivity material (PEG 400). The phase separation was observed within 1 hour after preparation of the emulsion containing PEG 400, but the emulsion containing SNC was stable for 5 hours or more. To summarize this study, SNC, a natural-derived and non-toxic material, exhibits sufficient surface activity, thereby confirming the possibility of being applied to the food and pharmaceutical industry.
Publication
Journal: Annals of African Medicine
March/16/2021
Abstract
Background: Like many other academic programs, medical education is incomplete without a robust assessment plan.
Objective: The study aimed to evaluate the impact of longitudinal faculty development program (FDP) on the examination item quality (EIQ) from a cohort of medical college faculty members.
Methods: Item analysis (IA) of multiple-choice questions (MCQs) from a cohort of medical tutors over a 3-year period (2017 [S1], 2018 [S2], and 2019 [S3]) before and following once-per-week FDP was conducted. The questions were from three randomly selected courses: man and his environment (MEV) from phase 1, central nervous system (CNS) from phase 2, and internal medicine (MED) from phase 3. Data assessed were 480 MCQs from the final exams in the courses. The parameters considered in IA were the difficulty index, index of discrimination, nonfunctional distractors (NFDs), distractor efficiency for each question item, and Cronbach's alpha (CA) for the test as a whole. Comparison over the 3 years was made using Fisher's exact test and repeated-measures ANOVA with Bonferroni test as post hoc test.
Results: Overall, out of 480 MCQs, 272 had no NFD (52 [19.52%], 104 [38.24%], and 116 [42.65%] in 2017, 2018, and 2019, respectively) with a significant difference between S3, S2, and S1 (P < 0.0001). The mean CA for the exams in S1, S2, and S3, respectively, were 0.51, 0.77, and 0.84, P < 0.0001.
Conclusion: There was an improvement in EIQ following the implementation of longitudinal FDP. Thus, the need for active training and retraining of the faculty for a better EIQ cannot be overemphasized.
Résumé Contexte: Comme beaucoup d'autres programmes universitaires, la formation médicale est incomplète sans un plan d'évaluation solide. Objectif: L'étude visait à évaluer l'impact du programme longitudinal de formation professorale (FDP) sur la qualité des éléments d'examen (EIQ) d'une cohorte de membres du corps professoral des facultés de médecine. Méthodes: Analyse des éléments (IA) des questions à choix multiples (QCM) d'une cohorte de tuteurs médicaux une période de trois ans (2017 [S1], 2018 [S2] et 2019 [S3]) avant et après le déroulement du FDP hebdomadaire a été effectuée. Les questions venaient de trois cours choisis au hasard: l'homme et son environnement (MEV) de la phase 1, le système nerveux central (SNC) de la phase 2 et interne médecine (MED) de la phase 3. Les données évaluées étaient 480 QCM des examens finaux des cours. Les paramètres considérés dans IA étaient l'indice de difficulté, l'indice de discrimination, les distracteurs non fonctionnels (NFD), l'efficacité du distracteur pour chaque question et le alpha (CA) pour le test dans son ensemble. La comparaison au cours des 3 années a été faite en utilisant le test exact de Fisher et l'ANOVA à mesures répétées avec Test de Bonferroni comme test post hoc. Résultats: Dans l'ensemble, sur 480 QCM, 272 n'avaient pas de NFD (52 [19,52%], 104 [38,24%] et 116 [42,65%] en 2017, 2018 et 2019, respectivement) avec une différence significative entre S3, S2 et S1 (P <0,0001). L'AC moyenne pour les examens en S1, S2 et S3, respectivement, était de 0,51, 0,77 et 0,84, P <0,0001. Conclusion: Il y a eu une amélioration de l'EIQ après la mise en œuvre du FDP. Ainsi, la nécessité d'une formation active et d'un recyclage de la faculté pour un meilleur QEI ne peut pas être surestimée.
Keywords: Faculty development; impact; medical education; multiple-choice question.
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Publication
Journal: Saudi Journal of Biological Sciences
June/13/2021
Abstract
Parkinson's disease (PD) is the result of dopaminergic (DA) neuronal death in the substantianigra pars compacta (SNc). Current treatments for PD such as L-dopa are limited in effectiveness and fail to address the cause. Targeted anti-inflammatory therapies, particularly directed at nuclear factor kappa B (NF-κB) activity in alleviating degeneration of DA-neurons is of evolving interest. In the present study, we hypothesised that dexmedetomidine (DEX), an alpha-2 receptor adrenergic agonist, suppress the inflammatory responses associated with PD and restores dopaminergic levels by alleviating substantia nigral degeneration. Male mice (C57Bl/10, 8-11 months old and of 34-40 g of weight) were divided into: the control, 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP), and MPTP + dexmedetomidine (MPTP + DEX) (n = 26 each group). Dex restored dopamine levels in SNpc of MPTP-induced PD mice model. Results of immunohisto staining revealed that Dex treatment post-MPTP induction restored TH-positive cells, with only 12.37% increase (##p < 0.01 vs MPTP) on the third day and a steep 55% increase (###p < 0.001 vs MPTP) following the seventh day of Dex treatment. Moreover, the expressions of proinflammatory markers regulated by NF-κB were diminished in Dex + MPTP group. In addition, cylinder test revealed that Dex treatment improved asymmetric limb usage pattern in MPTP induced mice over the course of 7 days. Hence, in this study, we provided insight on the effect of Dex in the inhibition of NF-κB1 regulated proinflammatory mediators to improve dopamine levels and reduce SNpc dopaminergic neuronal degeneration.
Keywords: Degeneration; Dexmedetomidine; Dopaminergic neurons; Motor activity.
Publication
Journal: Cerebral Cortex
August/1/2021
Abstract
Parkinson's disease (PD) is characterized pathologically by alpha-synuclein (α-Syn) aggregates and clinically by the motor as well as cognitive deficits, including impairments in sequence learning and habit learning. Using intracerebral injection of WT and A53T mutant α-Syn fibrils, we investigate the behavioral mechanism of α-Syn for procedure-learning deficit in PD by critically determining the α-Syn-induced effects on model-based goal-directed behavior, model-free (probability-based) habit learning, and hierarchically organized sequence learning. 1) Contrary to the widely held view of habit-learning deficit in early PD, α-Syn aggregates in the dorsomedial striatum (DMS) and dorsolateral striatum (DLS) did not affect acquisition of habit learning, but selectively impaired goal-directed behavior with reduced value sensitivity. 2) α-Syn in the DLS (but not DMS) and SNc selectively impaired the sequence learning by affecting sequence initiation with the reduced first-step accuracy. 3) Adenosine A2A receptor (A2AR) antagonist KW6002 selectively improved sequence learning by preferentially improving sequence initiation and shift of sequence learning as well as behavioral reactivity. These findings established a casual role of α-Syn in the SN-DLS pathway in sequence-learning deficit and DMS α-Syn in goal-directed behavior deficit and suggest a novel therapeutic strategy to improve sequence-learning deficit in PD with enhanced sequence initiation by A2AR antagonists.
Keywords: adenosine A2A receptor; alpha-synuclein; habit; procedure learning; value.
Publication
Journal: Neuropathology and Applied Neurobiology
August/17/2021
Abstract
Aims: Brain insulin resistance (i.e., decreased insulin/insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) signalling) may play a role in the pathophysiology of Parkinson's disease (PD) and several anti-diabetic drugs have entered clinical development to evaluate their potential disease-modifying properties in PD. A measure of insulin resistance is the amount of the downstream messenger insulin receptor substrate-1 that is phosphorylated at serine residues 312 (IRS-1pS312) or 616 (IRS-1pS616). We assessed IRS-1pS312 and IRS-1pS616 expression in post-mortem brain tissue of PD patients and a preclinical rat model based on viral-mediated expression of A53T mutated human α-synuclein (AAV2/9-h-α-synA53T).
Methods: IRS-1pS312 and IRS-1pS616 staining intensity were determined by immunofluorescence in both neurons and glial cells in the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc) and putamen of PD patients and controls without known brain disease. We further explored a possible relation between α-synuclein aggregates and brain insulin resistance in PD patients. Both insulin resistance markers were also measured in the SNc and striatum of AAV2/9-h-α-synA53T rats.
Results: We found higher IRS-1pS312 staining intensity in nigral dopaminergic neurons and a trend for higher IRS-1pS312 staining intensity in putaminal neurons of PD patients. We observed no differences for IRS-1pS616 staining intensity in neurons or IRS-1pS312 staining intensity in glial cells. IRS-1pS312 showed high co-localisation within the core of nigral Lewy bodies. Like PD patients, AAV2/9-h-α-synA53T rats showed higher IRS-1pS312 staining intensity in the SNc and striatum than controls, whereas IRS-1pS616 was not different between groups.
Conclusions: Our results provide evidence for brain insulin resistance in PD and support the rationale for repurposing anti-diabetics for PD treatment.
Keywords: IGF-1; alpha-synuclein; insulin; parkinsonism; substantia nigra.
Publication
Journal: Cell Death and Disease
September/17/2021
Abstract
Dopaminergic (DA) cell death in Parkinson's disease (PD) is associated with the gradual appearance of neuronal protein aggregates termed Lewy bodies (LBs) that are comprised of vesicular membrane structures and dysmorphic organelles in conjunction with the protein alpha-Synuclein (α-Syn). Although the exact mechanism of neuronal aggregate formation and death remains elusive, recent research suggests α-Syn-mediated alterations in the lysosomal degradation of aggregated proteins and organelles - a process termed autophagy. Here, we used a combination of molecular biology and immunochemistry to investigate the effect of α-Syn on autophagy turnover in cultured human DA neurons and in human post-mortem brain tissue. We found α-Syn overexpression to reduce autophagy turnover by compromising the fusion of autophagosomes with lysosomes, thus leading to a decrease in the formation of autolysosomes. In accord with a compensatory increase in the plasma membrane fusion of autophagosomes, α-Syn enhanced the number of extracellular vesicles (EV) and the abundance of autophagy-associated proteins in these EVs. Mechanistically, α-Syn decreased the abundance of the v-SNARE protein SNAP29, a member of the SNARE complex mediating autophagolysosome fusion. In line, SNAP29 knockdown mimicked the effect of α-Syn on autophagy whereas SNAP29 co-expression reversed the α-Syn-induced changes on autophagy turnover and EV release and ameliorated DA neuronal cell death. In accord with our results from cultured neurons, we found a stage-dependent reduction of SNAP29 in SNc DA neurons from human post-mortem brain tissue of Lewy body pathology (LBP) cases. In summary, our results thus demonstrate a previously unknown effect of α-Syn on intracellular autophagy-associated SNARE proteins and, as a consequence, a reduced autolysosome fusion. As such, our findings will therefore support the investigation of autophagy-associated pathological changes in PD.
Publication
Journal: Foods
January/10/2022
Abstract
This study, which was conducted as part of the Italian Taste project, was aimed at exploring the relationship between actual liking and sensory perception in four food models. Each food model was spiked with four levels of prototypical tastant (i.e., citric acid, sucrose, sodium chloride, capsaicin) to elicit a target sensation (TS) at an increasing perceived intensity. Participants (N = 2258; 59% women, aged 18-60) provided demographic information, a stated liking for 40 different foods/beverages, and their responsiveness to tastants in water. A food-specific Pearson's coefficient was calculated individually to estimate the relationship between actual liking and TS responsiveness. Considering the relationship magnitude, consumers were grouped into four food-specific clusters, depending on whether they showed a strong negative (SNC), a weak negative (WNC), a weak positive (WPC), or a strong positive correlation (SPC). Overall, the degree of liking raised in parallel with sweetness responsiveness, fell as sourness and pungency perception increased, and showed an inverted U-shape relationship with saltiness. The SNC clusters generally perceived TSs at higher intensities, except for sourness. Clusters were validated by associating the level of stated liking towards food/beverages; however, some unexpected indications emerged: adding sugar to coffee or preferring spicy foods differentiated those presenting positive correlations from those showing negative correlations. Our findings constitute a step towards a more comprehensive understanding of food preferences.
<strong cl<em>a</em>ss="sub-title"> Keywords: </strong> <em>a</em>ctu<em>a</em>l liking; consumer segment<em>a</em>tion; perceived intensity; pungency; st<em>a</em>ted liking; t<em>a</em>stes.
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Publication
Journal: Journal of Comparative Neurology
December/19/1979
Abstract
The efferent connections of the medial (MHb) and lateral (LHb) habenular nuclei in the rat were demonstrated autoradiographically following small injections of tritiated amino acids localized within various parts of the habenular complex. Comparison of individual cases led to the following conclusions. MHb efferents form the core portion of the fasciculus retroflexus and pass to the interpeduncular nucleus (IP) in which they terminate in a topographic pattern that refects 90 degrees rotations such that dorsal MHb projects to lateral IP, medial MHb to ventral, and lateral MHb to dorsal IP. Most MHb fibers cross in the interpeduncular necleus in the "figure 8" pattern described by Cajal, and terminate throughout the width of IP with only moderate preference for the ipsilateral side. However, the most dorsal part of MHb projects almost exclusively to the most lateral IP zone in a cluster pattern that is particularly dense on the ipsilateral side. The MHb appears to have no other significant projections, but very sparse MHb fibers may pass to the supracommissural septum and to the median raphe nucleus. Except for some fibers passing ventrally into the mediodorsal nucleus, all of the LHb efferents enter the fasciculus retroflexus and compose the mantle portion of the bundle. No LHb projections follow the stria medullaris. In the ventral tegmental area LHb efferents become organized into groups that disperse in several directions: (a) Rostrally directed fibers follow the medial forebrain bundle to the lateral, posterior and dorsomedial hypothalamic nuclei, ventromedial thalamic nucleus, lateral preoptic area, substantia innominata and ventrolateral septum. (b) Fibers turning laterally distribute to the substantia nigra, pars compacta (SNC); a small number continue through SNC to adjacent tegmentum. (c) The largest contingent of LHb efferents passes dorsocaudally into paramedian midbrain regions including median and dorsal raphe nuclei, and to adjacent tegmental reticular formation. Sparse addition LHb projections pass to the pretectal area, superior colliculus, nucleus reticularis tegmenti pontis, parabrachial nuclei and locus coeruleus. No LHb projections appear to involve the interpeduncular nucleus. All of these connections are in varying degree bilateral, with decussations in the supramammillary region, ventral tegmental area and median raphe nucleus. On the basis of differential afferent and efferent connections, the LHb can be divided into a medial (M-LHb) and a lateral (L-LHb) portion. The M-LHb, receiving most of its afferents from limbic regions and only few from globus pallidus, projects mainly to the raphe nuclei, while L-LHb, afferented mainly by globus pallidus and in lesser degree by the limbic forebrain, projects predominantly to a large region of reticular formation alongside the median raphe nucleus. Both M-LHb and L-LHb, however, project to SNC. The reported data are discussed in correlation with recent histochemical findings.
Publication
Journal: Experimental Neurology
January/29/2003
Abstract
Parkinson's disease (PD) is characterized pathologically by preferential degeneration of the dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc). Nigral cell death is accompanied by the accumulation of a wide range of poorly degraded proteins and the formation of proteinaceous inclusions (Lewy bodies) in dopaminergic neurons. Mutations in the genes encoding alpha-synuclein and two enzymes of the ubiquitin-proteasome system, parkin and ubiquitin C-terminal hydrolase L1, are associated with neurodegeneration in some familial forms of PD. We now show that, in comparison to age-matched controls, alpha-subunits (but not beta-subunits) of 26/20S proteasomes are lost within dopaminergic neurons and 20S proteasomal enzymatic activities are impaired in the SNc in sporadic PD. In addition, while the levels of the PA700 proteasome activator are reduced in the SNc in PD, PA700 expression is increased in other brain regions such as the frontal cortex and striatum. We also found that levels of the PA28 proteasome activator are very low to almost undetectable in the SNc compared to other brain areas in both normal and PD subjects. These findings suggest that failure of the ubiquitin-proteasome system to adequately clear unwanted proteins may underlie vulnerability and degeneration of the SNc in both sporadic and familial PD.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Neuroscience
May/29/2003
Abstract
Although many psychopharmacological factors contribute to nicotine addiction, midbrain dopaminergic systems have received much attention because of their roles in reinforcement and associative learning. It is generally thought that the mesocorticolimbic dopaminergic system is important for the acquisition of behaviors that are reinforced by the salient drives of the environment or by the inappropriate stimuli of addictive drugs. Nicotine, as obtained from tobacco, can activate nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) and excite midbrain neurons of the mesocorticolimbic system. Using midbrain slices from rats, wild-type mice, and genetically engineered mice, we have found differences in the nAChR currents from the ventral tegmental area (VTA) and the substantia nigra compacta (<em>SNc</em>). Nicotinic AChRs containing the <em>alpha</em>7 subunit (<em>alpha</em>7* nAChRs) have a low expression density. Electrophysiological analysis of nAChR currents, autoradiography of [125I]-<em>alpha</em>-bungarotoxin binding, and in situ hybridization revealed that <em>alpha</em>7* nAChRs are more highly expressed in the VTA than the <em>SNc</em>. In contrast, beta2* nAChRs are move evenly distributed at a higher density in both the VTA and <em>SNc</em>. At the concentration of nicotine obtained by tobacco smokers, the slow components of current (mainly mediated by beta2* nAChRs) become essentially desensitized. However, the minority <em>alpha</em>7* component of the current in the VTA/<em>SNc</em> is not significantly desensitized by nicotine in the range < or =100 nm. These results suggest that nicotine, as obtained from tobacco, can have multiple effects on the midbrain areas by differentially influencing dopamine neurons of the VTA and <em>SNc</em> and differentially desensitizing <em>alpha</em>7* and non-<em>alpha</em>7 nAChRs.
Publication
Journal: Experimental Neurology
September/3/2009
Abstract
Parkinson's disease (PD), the most frequent movement disorder, is caused by the progressive loss of the dopamine neurons within the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc) and the associated deficiency of the neurotransmitter dopamine in the striatum. Most cases of PD occur sporadically with unknown cause, but mutations in several genes have been linked to genetic forms of PD (alpha-synuclein, Parkin, DJ-1, PINK1, and LRRK2). These genes have provided exciting new avenues to study PD pathogenesis and the mechanisms underlying the selective dopaminergic neuron death in PD. Epidemiological studies in humans, as well as molecular studies in toxin-induced and genetic animal models of PD show that mitochondrial dysfunction is a defect occurring early in the pathogenesis of both sporadic and familial PD. Mitochondrial dynamics (fission, fusion, migration) is important for neurotransmission, synaptic maintenance and neuronal survival. Recent studies have shown that PINK1 and Parkin play crucial roles in the regulation of mitochondrial dynamics and function. Mutations in DJ-1 and Parkin render animals more susceptible to oxidative stress and mitochondrial toxins implicated in sporadic PD, lending support to the hypothesis that some PD cases may be caused by gene-environmental factor interactions. A small proportion of alpha-synuclein is imported into mitochondria, where it accumulates in the brains of PD patients and may impair respiratory complex I activity. Accumulation of clonal, somatic mitochondrial DNA deletions has been observed in the substantia nigra during aging and in PD, suggesting that mitochondrial DNA mutations in some instances may pre-dispose to dopamine neuron death by impairing respiration. Besides compromising cellular energy production, mitochondrial dysfunction is associated with the generation of oxidative stress, and dysfunctional mitochondria more readily mediate the induction of apoptosis, especially in the face of cellular stress. Collectively, the studies examined and summarized here reveal an important causal role for mitochondrial dysfunction in PD pathogenesis, and suggest that drugs and genetic approaches with the ability to modulate mitochondrial dynamics, function and biogenesis may have important clinical applications in the future treatment of PD.
Publication
Journal: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
February/5/2008
Abstract
Studies have shown that alpha-synuclein (alpha-syn) deposited in Lewy bodies in brain tissue from patients with Parkinson disease (PD) is extensively phosphorylated at Ser-129. We used recombinant Adeno-associated virus (rAAV) to overexpress human wild-type (wt) alpha-syn and two human alpha-syn mutants with site-directed replacement of Ser-129 to alanine (S129A) or to aspartate (S129D) in the nigrostriatal tract of the rat to investigate the effect of Ser-129 phosphorylation state on dopaminergic neuron pathology. Rats were injected with rAAV2/5 vectors in the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc) on one side of the brain; the other side remained as a nontransduced control. The level of human wt or mutant alpha-syn expressed on the injected side was about four times the endogenous rat alpha-syn. There was a significant reduction of dopaminergic neurons in the SNc and dopamine (DA) and tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) levels in the striatum of all S129A-treated rats as early as 4 wk postinjection. Nigral DA pathology occurred more slowly in the wt-injected animals, but by 26 wk the wt alpha-syn group lost nigral TH neurons equivalent to the mutated S129A group at 8 wk. In stark contrast, we did not observe any pathological changes in S129D-treated animals. Therefore, the nonphosphorylated form of S129 exacerbates alpha-syn-induced nigral pathology, whereas Ser-129 phosphorylation eliminates alpha-syn-induced nigrostriatal degeneration. This suggests possible new therapeutic targets for Parkinson Disease.
Publication
Journal: Brain Research
January/30/1991
Abstract
The distribution of calbindin-D28K (CaBP)-positive neurons was investigated by immunohistochemistry in 4 controls, 5 cases of Parkinson's disease and a single case of strionigral degeneration. CaBP-positive neurons were preferentially localized to the mediodorsal portion of the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNC) in the beta layer, while CaBP-negative, melanin-positive neurons were concentrated in the ventrolateral SNC in the alpha layer. In Parkinson's disease and the case of strionigral degeneration, there was a relative sparing of the CaBP-positive neurons compared with CaBP-negative, pigmented neurons. These data imply that CaBP may confer some protection to SNC dopaminergic neurons against the pathological process which is responsible for Parkinson's disease and strionigral degeneration.
Publication
Journal: Neurobiology of Disease
August/23/2007
Abstract
To identify gene expression patterns in human dopamine (DA) neurons in the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc) of male and female control and Parkinson disease (PD) patients, we harvested DA neurons from frozen SNc from 16 subjects (4 male PDs, 4 female PDs, 4 male and 4 female controls) using Laser Capture microdissection and microarrays. We assessed for enrichment of functional categories with a hypergeometric distribution. The data were validated with QPCR. We observed that gender has a pervasive effect on gene expression in DA neurons. Genes upregulated in females relative to males are mainly involved in signal transduction and neuronal maturation, while in males some of the upregulated genes (alpha-synuclein and PINK1) were previously implicated in the pathogenesis of PD. In females with PD we found alterations in genes with protein kinase activity, genes involved in proteolysis and WNT signaling pathway, while in males with PD there were alterations in protein-binding proteins and copper-binding proteins. Our data reveal broad gender-based differences in gene expression in human dopaminergic neurons of SNc that may underlie the predisposition of males to PD. Moreover, we show that gender influences the response to PD, suggesting that the nature of the disease and the response to treatment may be gender-dependent.
Publication
Journal: Movement Disorders
January/30/2008
Abstract
The role of microglial activation in multiple system atrophy (MSA) was investigated in a transgenic mouse model featuring oligodendroglial alpha-synuclein inclusions and loss of midbrain dopaminergic neurons by means of histopathology and morphometric analysis. Our findings demonstrate early progressive microglial activation in substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc) associated with increased expression of iNOS and correlating with dopaminergic neuronal loss. Suppression of microglial activation by early long-term minocycline treatment protected dopaminergic SNc neurons. The results suggest that oligodendroglial overexpression of alpha-synuclein may induce neuroinflammation related to nitrosive stress which is likely to contribute to neurodegeneration in MSA. Further, we detected increased toll-like receptor 4 immunoreactivity in both transgenic mice and MSA brains indicating a possible signaling pathway in MSA which needs to be further studied as a candidate target for neuroprotective interventions.
Publication
Journal: Experimental Neurology
July/9/2007
Abstract
Parkinson's disease (PD) is known to be a chronic and progressive neurodegenerative disease caused by a selective degeneration of dopaminergic (DAergic) neurons in the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc). A large body of experimental evidence indicates that the factors involved in the pathogenesis of this disease are several, occurring inside and outside the DAergic neuron. Recently, the role of the neuron-glia interaction and the inflammatory process, in particular, has been the object of intense study by the research community. It seems to represent a new therapeutic approach opportunity for this neurological disorder. Indeed, it has been demonstrated that the cyclooxygenase type 2 (COX-2) is up-regulated in SNc DAergic neurons in both PD patients and animal models of PD and, furthermore, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) pre-treatment protects against 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP) or 6 hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA)-induced nigro-striatal dopamine degeneration. Moreover, recent epidemiological studies have revealed that the risk of developing PD is reduced in humans who make therapeutical use of NSAIDs. Consequently, it is hypothesized that they might delay or prevent the onset of PD. However, whether or not these common drugs may also be of benefit to those individuals who already have Parkinson's disease has not as yet been shown. In this paper, evidence relating to the protective effects of aspirin or other NSAIDs on DAergic neurons in animal models of Parkinson's disease will be discussed. In addition, the pharmacological mechanisms by which these molecules can exert their neuroprotective effects will be reviewed. Finally, epidemiological data exploring the effectiveness of NSAIDs in the prevention of PD and their possible use as adjuvants in the therapy of this neurodegenerative disease will also be examined.
Publication
Journal: Molecular Therapy
November/22/2010
Abstract
Two small-interfering RNAs (siRNAs) targeting alpha-synuclein (alpha-syn) and three control siRNAs were cloned in an adeno-associated virus (AAV) vector and unilaterally injected into rat substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc). Reduction of alpha-syn resulted in a rapid (4 week) reduction in the number of tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) positive cells and striatal dopamine (DA) on the injected side. The level of neurodegeneration induced by the different siRNAs correlated with their ability to downregulate alpha-syn protein and mRNA in tissue culture and in vivo. Examination of various SNc neuronal markers indicated that neurodegeneration was due to cell loss and not just downregulation of DA synthesis. Reduction of alpha-syn also resulted in a pronounced amphetamine induced behavioral asymmetry consistent with the level of neurodegeneration. In contrast, none of the three control siRNAs, which targeted genes not normally expressed in SNc, showed evidence of neurodegeneration or behavioral asymmetry, even at longer survival times. Moreover, co-expression of both rat alpha-syn and alpha-syn siRNA partially reversed the neurodegenerative and behavioral effects of alpha-syn siRNA alone. Our data show that alpha-syn plays an important role in the rat SNc and suggest that both up- and downregulation of wild-type alpha-syn expression increase the risk of nigrostriatal pathology.
Publication
Journal: Neuroscience Letters
June/4/2003
Abstract
The proteolytic activities of 26/20S proteasomes are impaired in the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc) in sporadic Parkinson's disease (PD). In the present study, we examined the structural integrity of the proteasome by determining the levels of the beta- and alpha-subunits which together normally constitute the catalytic core of 26/20S proteasomes. Western blot analyzes and immunohistochemical staining revealed a major and selective loss of alpha-subunits in dopaminergic neurons of the SNc but not in other brain regions in sporadic PD. This defect is known to cause the proteasome to become unstable and prevents its assembly with resultant impairment of enzymatic activity. Thus, structural and function defects in 26/20S proteasomes may underlie protein accumulation, formation of proteinaceous Lewy bodies and dopaminergic neuronal death in the SNc in sporadic PD.
Publication
Journal: Movement Disorders
February/19/2008
Abstract
A number of factors have been implicated in the pathogenesis of cell death in Parkinson's disease (PD). These include oxidative stress, mitochondrial dysfunction, inflammation, excitotoxicity, and apoptosis. While the precise pathogenic mechanism leading to neurodegeneration in PD is not known, there is considerable evidence suggesting that cell death occurs by way of a signal-mediated apoptotic process. PD is also characterized by intracellular proteinaceous inclusions or Lewy bodies. Proteolytic stress arises as a consequence of the excessive production of misfolded proteins, which exceed the capacity of the ubiquitin-proteasome system to degrade them. Recent genetic and laboratory studies support the possible relevance of proteolytic stress to both familial and sporadic forms of PD. Postmortem studies have shown that in the SNc of sporadic PD patients there are reduced levels of the alpha subunit of the 20S proteasome and reduced proteolytic enzyme activities. A determination as to the precise cause of cell death in PD, and the identification of specific targets for the development of drugs that might modify disease progression is one of the most critical goals in PD research. It is anticipated that over the next few years there will be a flurry of scientific activity examining the mechanism of cell death and putative neuroprotective interventions.
Publication
Journal: Movement Disorders
August/20/2013
Abstract
Although there have been significant advances, pathogenesis in Parkinson's disease (PD) is still poorly understood. Potential clues about pathogenesis that have not been systematically pursued are suggested by the restricted pattern of neuronal pathology in the disease. In addition to dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc), a significant number of other central and peripheral neuronal populations exhibit Lewy pathology (LP), phenotypic dysregulation, or frank degeneration in PD patients. Drawing on this literature, there appear to be a small number of risk factors contributing to vulnerability. These include autonomous activity, broad action potentials, low intrinsic calcium-buffering capacity, poorly myelinated long highly branched axons and terminal fields, and use of a monoamine neurotransmitter, often with the catecholamine-derived neuromelanin pigment. Of these phenotypic traits, only the physiological ones appear to provide a reachable therapeutic target at present.
Publication
Journal: American Journal of Physiology - Heart and Circulatory Physiology
July/31/2006
Abstract
The role of caveolae, membrane microenvironments enriched in signaling molecules, in myocardial ischemia is poorly defined. In the current study, we used cardiac myocytes prepared from adult rats to test the hypothesis that opioid receptors (OR), which are capable of producing cardiac protection in vivo, promote cardiac protection in cardiac myocytes in a caveolae-dependent manner. We determined protein expression and localization of delta-OR (DOR) using coimmunohistochemistry, caveolar fractionation, and immunoprecipitations. DOR colocalized in fractions with caveolin-3 (Cav-3), a structural component of caveolae in muscle cells, and could be immunoprecipitated by a Cav-3 antibody. Immunohistochemistry confirmed plasma membrane colocalization of DOR with Cav-3. Cardiac myocytes were subjected to simulated ischemia (2 h) or an ischemic preconditioning (IPC) protocol (10 min ischemia, 30 min recovery, 2 h ischemia) in the presence and absence of methyl-beta-cyclodextrin (MbetaCD, 2 mM), which binds cholesterol and disrupts caveolae. We also assessed the cardiac protective effects of SNC-121 (SNC), a selective DOR agonist, on cardiac myocytes with or without MbetaCD and MbetaCD preloaded with cholesterol. Ischemia, simulated by mineral oil layering to inhibit gas exchange, promoted cardiac myocyte cell death (trypan blue staining), a response blunted by SNC (37 +/- 3 vs. 59 +/- 3% dead cells in the presence and absence of 1 muM SNC, respectively, P < 0.01) or by use of the IPC protocol (35 +/- 4 vs. 62 +/- 3% dead cells, P < 0.01). MbetaCD treatment, which disrupted caveolae (as detected by electron microscopy), fully attenuated the protective effects of IPC or SNC, resulting in cell death comparable to that of the ischemic group. By contrast, SNC-induced protection was not abrogated in cells incubated with cholesterol-saturated MbetaCD, which maintained caveolae structure and function. These findings suggest a key role for caveolae, perhaps through enrichment of signaling molecules, in contributing to protection of cardiac myocytes from ischemic damage.
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Publication
Journal: Brain research. Developmental brain research
May/6/2002
Abstract
Parkinson's disease (PD) is a neurodegenerative disorder characterized by the loss of dopamine (DA) neurons of the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc). Although the exact mechanisms responsible for this cell loss are unclear, emerging evidence suggests the involvement of inflammatory events. In the present study, we characterized the effects of the proinflammatory bacteriotoxin lipopolysaccharide (LPS) on the number of tyrosine hydroxylase immunoreactive (THir) cells (used as an index for DA neurons) in primary mesencephalic cultures. LPS (10-80 microg/ml) selectively decreased THir cells and increased culture media levels of interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta) and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) as well as nitrite (an index of nitric oxide (NO) production). Cultures exposed to both LPS and neutralizing antibodies to IL-1beta or TNF-alpha showed an attenuation of the LPS-induced THir cell loss by at least 50% in both cases. Inhibition of the inducible form of nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) by L-NIL did not affect LPS toxicity, but increased the LPS-induced levels of both TNF-alpha and IL-1beta. These findings suggest that neuroinflammatory stimuli which lead to elevations in cytokines may induce DA neuron cell loss in a NO-independent manner and contribute to PD pathogenesis.
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Publication
Journal: Journal of Neurochemistry
August/13/2013
Abstract
Alpha-synuclein (α-syn) is a synaptic protein that mutations have been linked to Parkinson's disease (PD), a common neurodegenerative disorder that is caused by the degeneration of the dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc). How α-syn can contribute to neurodegeneration in PD is not conclusive but it is agreed that mutations or excessive accumulation of α-syn can lead to the formation of α-syn oligomers or aggregates that interfere with normal cellular function and contribute to the degeneration of dopaminergic neurons. In this study, we found that α-syn can impair the normal dynamics of mitochondria and this effect is particular prominent in A53T α-syn mutant. In mice expressing A53T α-syn, age-dependent changes in both mitochondrial morphology and proteins that regulate mitochondrial fission and fusion were observed. In the cellular model of PD, we found that α-syn reduces the movement of mitochondria in both SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma and hippocampal neurons. Taken together, our study provides a new mechanism of how α-syn can contribute to PD through the impairment of normal dynamics of mitochondria.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Neurophysiology
July/4/2001
Abstract
Somatodendritic release of dopamine (DA) in midbrain is, at least in part, nonsynaptic; moreover, midbrain DA receptors are predominantly extrasynaptic. Thus somatodendritic DA mediates volume transmission, with an efficacy regulated by the diffusion and uptake characteristics of the local extracellular microenvironment. Here, we quantitatively evaluated diffusion and uptake in substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc) and reticulata (SNr), ventral tegmental area (VTA), and cerebral cortex in guinea pig brain slices. The geometric parameters that govern diffusion, extracellular volume fraction (alpha) and tortuosity (lambda), together with linear uptake (k'), were determined for tetramethylammonium (TMA(+)), and for DA, using point-source diffusion combined with ion-selective and carbon-fiber microelectrodes. TMA(+)-diffusion measurements revealed a large alpha of 30% in SNc, SNr, and VTA, which was significantly higher than the 22% in cortex. Values for lambda and k' for TMA(+) were similar among regions. Point-source DA-diffusion curves fitted theory well with linear uptake, with significantly higher values of k' for DA in SNc and VTA (0.08--0.09 s(-1)) than in SNr (0.006 s(-1)), where DA processes are sparser. Inhibition of DA uptake by GBR-12909 caused a greater decrease in k' in SNc than in VTA. In addition, DA uptake was slightly decreased by the norepinephrine transport inhibitor, desipramine in both regions, although this was statistically significant only in VTA. We used these data to model the radius of influence of DA in midbrain. Simulated release from a 20-vesicle point source produced DA concentrations sufficient for receptor activation up to 20 microm away with a DA half-life at this distance of several hundred milliseconds. Most importantly, this model showed that diffusion rather than uptake was the most important determinant of DA time course in midbrain, which contrasts strikingly with the striatum where uptake dominates. The issues considered here, while specific for DA in midbrain, illustrate fundamental biophysical properties relevant for all extracellular communication.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Medicinal Chemistry
August/17/1994
Publication
Journal: Movement Disorders
January/29/2014
Abstract
Although there have been significant advances, pathogenesis in Parkinson's disease (PD) is still poorly understood. Potential clues about pathogenesis that have not been systematically pursued are suggested by the restricted pattern of neuronal pathology in the disease. In addition to dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc), a significant number of other central and peripheral neuronal populations exhibit Lewy pathology (LP), phenotypic dysregulation, or frank degeneration in PD patients. Drawing on this literature, there appears to be a small number of risk factors contributing to vulnerability. These include autonomous activity, broad action potentials, low intrinsic calcium buffering capacity, poorly myelinated long highly branched axons and terminal fields, and use of a catecholamine neurotransmitter, often with the catecholamine-derived neuromelanin pigment. Of these phenotypic traits, only the physiological ones appear to provide a reachable therapeutic target at present.
Publication
Journal: Circulation Research
December/1/1997
Abstract
NO donors have complex effects on Ca2+ currents in native cardiac cells, with reports of direct stimulation and indirect cGMP-mediated inhibition or stimulation. To investigate the molecular basis of these effects, we tested the effects of one class of NO donors, S-nitrosothiols (RSNOs), on expressed cardiovascular L-type Ca2+ channels (alpha 1C +/- beta 1a +/- alpha 2 or alpha 1C +/- beta 2a +/- alpha 2) in human embryonic kidney (HEK293) cells. The RSNO compounds we used were S-nitroso-N-acetylpenicillamine (SNAP, 5 to 10 nmol/L or 100 to 800 mumol/L), S-nitrosocysteine (SNC, 100 mumol/L or 1 mmol/L), and S-nitrosoglutathione (GSNO, 1 mmol/L). Currents were measured using whole-cell patch recordings with 2 to 10 mmol/L Ba2+ as the charge carrier. SNAP reduced the amplitude of barium currents (IBa) through all the subunit combinations, with and EC50 of 360 mumol/L for alpha 1C + beta 1a channels. SNC or GSNO also inhibited IBa, albeit less potently. The inhibitory effect of SNAP was not affected by methylene blue (10 to 30 mumol/L) or 8-bromo-cGMP (200 to 400 mumol/L). The effects are relatively specific for Ca2+ channels, as expressed cardiac or skeletal muscle Na+ channels, which have a similar overall architecture, were barely affected by SNAP at concentrations as high as 1 mmol/L. We conclude that in the HEK293 expression system, the S-nitrosothiol NO donors inhibit L-type Ca2+ channels by a mechanism independent of cGMP.
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Journal: Frontiers in Neurology
November/13/2018
Abstract
Significant advances have been made uncovering the factors that render neurons vulnerable in Parkinson's disease (PD). However, the critical pathogenic events leading to cell loss remain poorly understood, complicating the development of disease-modifying interventions. Given that the cardinal motor symptoms and pathology of PD involve the loss of dopamine (DA) neurons of the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc), a majority of the work in the PD field has focused on this specific neuronal population. PD however, is not a disease of DA neurons exclusively: pathology, most notably in the form of Lewy bodies and neurites, has been reported in multiple regions of the central and peripheral nervous system, including for example the locus coeruleus, the dorsal raphe nucleus and the dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus. Cell and/or terminal loss of these additional nuclei is likely to contribute to some of the other symptoms of PD and, most notably to the non-motor features. However, exactly which regions show actual, well-documented, cell loss is presently unclear. In this review we will first examine the strength of the evidence describing the regions of cell loss in idiopathic PD, as well as the order in which this loss occurs. Secondly, we will discuss the neurochemical, morphological and physiological characteristics that render SNc DA neurons vulnerable, and will examine the evidence for these characteristics being shared across PD-affected neuronal populations. The insights raised by focusing on the underpinnings of the selective vulnerability of neurons in PD might be helpful to facilitate the development of new disease-modifying strategies and improve animal models of the disease.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Neuroscience
April/4/2001
Abstract
Although mesolimbic dopamine (DA) transmission has been implicated in behavioral and cortical arousal, DA neurons in the ventral tegmental area (VTA) and substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc) are not significantly modulated by anesthetics or the sleep-wake cycle. However, VTA and SN non-DA neurons evince increased firing rates during active wakefulness (AW) and rapid eye movement (REM) sleep, relative to quiet wakefulness. Here we describe the effects of movement, select anesthetics, and the sleep-wake cycle on the activity of a homogeneous population of VTA GABA-containing neurons during normal sleep and after 24 hr sleep deprivation. In freely behaving rats, VTA GABA neurons were relatively fast firing (29 +/- 6 Hz during AW), nonbursting neurons that exhibited markedly increased activity during the onset of discrete movements. Adequate anesthesia produced by administration of chloral hydrate, ketamine, or halothane significantly reduced VTA GABA neuron firing rate and converted their activity into phasic 0.5-2.0 sec ON/OFF periods. VTA GABA neuron firing rate decreased 53% during slow-wave sleep (SWS) and increased 79% during REM, relative to AW; however, the discharging was not synchronous with electrocortical alpha wave activity during AW, delta wave activity during SWS, or gamma wave activity during REM. During deprived SWS, there was a direct correlation between increased VTA GABA neuron slowing and increased delta wave power. These findings indicate that the discharging of VTA GABA neurons correlates with psychomotor behavior and that these neurons may be an integral part of the extrathalamic cortical activating system.
Publication
Journal: The FEBS journal
October/7/2018
Abstract
The cardinal motor symptoms of Parkinson's disease (PD) are caused by the death of dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc). Alpha-synuclein (aSYN) pathology and mitochondrial dysfunction have been implicated in PD pathogenesis, but until recently it was unclear why SNc dopaminergic neurons should be particularly vulnerable to these two types of insult. In this brief review, the evidence that SNc dopaminergic neurons have an anatomical, physiological, and biochemical phenotype that predisposes them to mitochondrial dysfunction and synuclein pathology is summarized. The recognition that certain traits may predispose neurons to PD-linked pathology creates translational opportunities for slowing or stopping disease progression.
Publication
Journal: Neurobiology of Aging
October/8/2009
Abstract
Activation of microglia along with the release of inflammatory cytokines and oxidative factors often accompanies toxin-induced degeneration of substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc) dopamine (DA) neurons. Multiple toxin exposure may synergistically influence microglial-dependent DA neuronal loss and, in fact, pre-treatment with one toxin may sensitize DA neurons to the impact of subsequent insults. Thus, we assessed whether priming SNc neurons with the inflammatory agent, lipopolysaccharide (LPS), influenced the impact of later exposure to the pesticide, paraquat, which has been reported to provoke DA loss. Indeed, LPS infusion into the SNc sensitized DA neurons to the neurodegenerative effects of a series of paraquat injections commencing 2 days later. In contrast, LPS pre-treatment actually protected against some of neurodegenerative effects of paraquat when the pesticide was administered 7 days after the endotoxin. These sensitization and de-sensitization effects were associated with altered expression of reactive microglia expressing inducible immunoproteasome subunits, as well as variations of fibroblast growth factor and a time-dependent infiltration of peripheral immune cells. Circulating levels of the inflammatory cytokines, interleukin (IL)-6, IL-2, tumor necrosis factor-alpha and interferon-gamma were also time-dependently elevated following intra-SNc LPS infusion. These data suggest that inflammatory priming may influence DA neuronal sensitivity to subsequent environmental toxins by modulating the state of glial and immune factors, and these findings may be important for neurodegenerative conditions, such as Parkinson's disease (PD).
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