Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6276599 | Neuroscience | 2011 | 11 Pages |
The pathogenesis of Parkinson's disease is thought to involve a self-sustaining cycle of neuroinflammation and neurodegeneration. In order to develop novel anti-inflammatory therapies to break this cycle, it is crucial that the temporal relationship between neurodegeneration and neuroinflammation is characterised in pre-clinical models to maximise their predictive validity. Thus, this study aimed to investigate the progression of neuroinflammation relative to nigrostriatal neurodegeneration in the two most commonly-used rat models of Parkinson's disease. Male Sprague-Dawley rats were lesioned by terminal or axonal administration of 6-hydroxydopamine, and were sacrificed for quantitative immunohistochemistry (to assess nigrostriatal integrity (anti-tyrosine hydroxylase), microgliosis (anti-OX42) and astrocytosis (anti-GFAP)) at 6 h 24 h 72 h or 2 weeks post-lesion. Following terminal lesion, dopaminergic deafferentation of the striatum was evident from 6 h post-lesion and was accompanied by microglial and astroglial activation. Dopamine neuron loss from the substantia nigra did not occur until 2 weeks after terminal lesion, and this was preceded by microglial, but not astroglial, activation. Following axonal lesion, retraction of nigrostriatal terminals from the striatum was not observed until the 72 h time-point, and this was associated with a slight astrocytosis, but not microgliosis. Degeneration of dopaminergic neurons from the substantia nigra was also evident from 72 h after axonal lesion, and was accompanied by nigral microgliosis and astrocytosis by 2 weeks. This study highlights the temporal relationship between neurodegeneration and neuroinflammation in models of Parkinson's disease, and should facilitate use of these models in the development of anti-inflammatory therapies for the human condition.
Research Highlightsâ¶Spatiotemporal pattern of neuroinflammation differs in the 6-hydroxydopamine-induced axonal and terminal lesion models of Parkinson's disease. â¶The terminal lesion is associated with rapid striatal microglial activation and dopaminergic deafferentation. â¶In both lesion models, activation of glial cells precedes or coincides with 6-hydroxydopamine-induced nigrostriatal degeneration.