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Roy N. Alcalay, M.D.
"Why do some people who carry genetic mutations associated with Parkinson’s disease (PD) never develop PD while others do?" asks Roy N. Alcalay, M.D., a postdoctoral fellow at the Center for Parkinson’s Disease and Other Movement Disorders...
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Chronic, systemic treatment with a metabotropic glutamate receptor 5 antagonist in 6-hydroxydopamine partially lesioned rats reverses abnormal firing of dopaminergic neurons.
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Brain Res 2009 Jun;
Authors: Li Chen, Qiao Jun Zhang, Jian Liu, Shuang Wang, Umar Ali, Zhen Hua Gui, Yong Wang
Department of Physiology and Pathophysiology, School of Medicine, Xi'an Jiaotong University, Xi'an 710061, China.
Increasing evidence indicates that the excessive glutamate release onto substantia nigra pars compacta (SNpc) dopaminergic neurons may play an important role in the progression of nigral degeneration. We examined the effects of chronic, systemic treatment with 2-methyl-6-(phenylethynyl)-pyridine (MPEP), a selective metabotropic glutamate receptor 5 antagonist, in firing activity of SNpc dopaminergic neurons in 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) partially lesioned rats. In 6-OHDA-lesioned rats treated with vehicle, injection of 6-OHDA (4 mug) into the medial forebrain bundle produced a partial lesion, 39% loss of tyrosine hydroxylase-immunoreactive (TH-ir) neurons in the SNpc. In partially lesioned rats, the electrophysiological characteristics of SNpc dopaminergic neurons showed that the firing rate of these neurons increased compared with sham-operated rats and the firing pattern also changed towards a burstier one. Chronic, systemic treatment of MPEP (3 mg/kg/day, 14 days) attenuated loss of TH-ir neurons and normalized the hyperactive firing activity in the SNpc induced by partial unilateral dopamine depletion lesions. In addition, no significant differences were found in the responsiveness of SNpc dopaminergic neurons to intravenous cumulative apomorphine in sham-operated, vehicle-treated and MPEP-treated rats, while ED(50) values for apomorphine in MPEP-treated rats were decreased as compared with vehicle-treated rats. These data demonstrate that the surviving dopaminergic neurons in the SNpc are hyperactive in an experimental model of moderate Parkinson's disease (PD). In this model, chronic, systemic MPEP treatment has the neuroprotective effect and reverses the abnormal firing activity of dopaminergic neurons, suggesting that MPEP has an important implication for the treatment of PD.
PMID: 19545547 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]










