Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3071974 NeuroImage 2013 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Severely bi-nigrally 6-OHDA-lesioned mice were treated with LD or PPX for 20 weeks.•LD and PPX did not change FP-CIT binding in the striatum of 6-OHDA mice.•LD and PPX had no toxic or regenerative effects on the damaged nigrostriatal system.•LD and PPX induced adaptive changes in the striatum of sham-lesioned mice.

A previous clinical trial studied the effect of long-term treatment with levodopa (LD) or the dopamine agonist pramipexole (PPX) on disease progression in Parkinson disease using SPECT with the dopamine transporter (DAT)-radioligand [123I]β-CIT as surrogate marker. [123I]β-CIT binding declined to significantly lower levels in patients receiving LD compared to PPX. However, the interpretation of this difference as LD-induced neurotoxicity, PPX-induced neuroprotection/-regeneration, or only drug-induced regulatory changes of DAT-availability remained controversial.To address this question experimentally, we induced a subtotal lesion of the substantia nigra in mice by bilateral injection of the neurotoxin 6-hydroxydopamine. After 4 weeks, mice were treated for 20 weeks orally with LD (100 mg/kg/day) or PPX (3 mg/kg/day), or water (vehicle) only. The integrity of nigrostriatal projections was assessed by repeated [123I]FP-CIT SPECT in vivo and by immunostaining for DAT and the dopamine-synthesizing enzyme tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) after sacrifice. In sham-lesioned mice, we found that both LD and PPX treatment significantly decreased the striatal FP-CIT binding (LD: − 21%; PPX: − 14%) and TH-immunoreactivity (LD: − 42%; PPX: − 45%), but increased DAT-immunoreactivity (LD: + 42%; PPX: + 33%) compared to controls without dopaminergic treatment. In 6-hydroxydopamine-lesioned mice, however, neither LD nor PPX significantly influenced the stably reduced FP-CIT SPECT signal (LD: − 66%; PPX: − 66%; controls − 66%), TH-immunoreactivity (LD: − 70%; PPX: − 72%; controls: − 77%) and DAT-immunoreactivity (LD: − 70%; PPX: − 75%; controls: − 75%) in the striatum or the number of TH-positive cells in the substantia nigra (LD: − 88%; PPX: − 88%; controls: − 86%), compared to lesioned mice without dopaminergic treatment.In conclusion, chronic dopaminergic stimulation with LD or PPX induced similar adaptive presynaptic changes in healthy mice, but no discernible changes in severely lesioned mice. These findings allow to more reliably interpret the results from clinical trials using neuroimaging of DAT as surrogate parameter.

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