Autor: |
Suarez, Luz M., Alberquilla, Samuel, García-Montes, Jose R., Moratalla, Rosario |
Předmět: |
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Zdroj: |
Journal of Neuroscience; 4/11/2018, Vol. 38 Issue 15, p3619-3630, 12p |
Abstrakt: |
In toxin-based models of Parkinson's disease (PD), striatal projection neurons (SPNs) exhibit dendritic atrophy and spine loss concurrent with an increase in excitability. Chronic L-DOPA treatment that induces dyskinesia selectively restores spine density and excitability in indirect pathway SPNs (iSPNs), whereas spine loss and hyperexcitability persist in direct pathway SPNs (dSPNs). These alterations have only been characterized in toxin-based models of PD, raising the possibility that they are an artifact of exposure to the toxin, which may engage compensatory mechanisms independent of the PD-like pathology or due to the loss of dopaminergic afferents. To test all these, we studied the synaptic remodeling in Pitx3-/- ; or aphakia mice, a genetic model of PD, in which most of the dopamine neurons in the substantia nigra fail to fully differentiate and to innervate the striatum. We made 3D reconstructions of the dendritic arbor and measured excitability in identified SPNs located in dorsal striatum of BAC-Pitx3-/- mice treated with saline or L-DOPA. Both dSPNs and iSPNs from BAC-Pitx3-/- mice had shorter dendritic trees, lower spine density, and more action potentials than their counterparts from WT mice. Chronic L-DOPA treatment restored spine density and firing rate in iSPNs. By contrast, in dSPNs, spine loss and hyperexcitability persisted following L-DOPA treatment, which is similar to what happens in 6-OHDA WT mice. This indicates that dopamine-mediated synaptic remodeling and plasticity is independent of dopamine innervation during SPN development and that Pitx3-/- mice are a good model because they develop the same pathology described in the toxins-based models and in human postmortem studies of advanced PD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
Databáze: |
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