Title of article
Dopamine neurotoxicity: age-dependent behavioral and histological effects
Author/Authors
Ippolita Cantuti-Castelvetri، نويسنده , , Barbara Shukitt-Hale، نويسنده , , James A. Joseph، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages
10
From page
697
To page
706
Abstract
The oxidative stress (OS) theory has implicated the involvement of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in both aging and age-dependent neurodegenerative diseases. The dopaminergic system is particularly vulnerable to ROS, and dopamine (DA) itself can be an endogenous source of ROS. The present study evaluated the hypothesis that DA-induced toxicity is age-dependent, and tested the behavioral and histological correlates of DA neurotoxicity in aging. Young (6 months) and middle-aged (15 months) rats were chronically treated with DA in the substantia nigra (SN, 1 μmol/2 μl vehicle per side/day/5 days) and were subsequently examined for changes in motor function and histology. The neurotoxic effect of DA treatment was an age-dependent effect, as middle-aged animals that received DA infusions in the SN were more impaired than their age-matched controls, especially on tasks that involved greater sensory–motor coordination, whereas young animals that received DA behaved similarly to their age-matched controls. The behavioral effects noted were accompanied by a loss of the tyrosine hydroxylase phenotype in substantia nigra. However, selective neurodegeneration was not noted in the SN of the treated animals, nor was a selective iron deposition noted at the site of injection. These results suggest that a neurochemical deficit and not cell loss per se within the nigrostriatal system underlies the motor behavioral deficits observed in the middle-aged rats.
Keywords
oxidative stress , aging , Motor behavior , Neurodegeneration , psychomotor performance , Dopamine toxicity
Journal title
Neurobiology of Aging
Serial Year
2003
Journal title
Neurobiology of Aging
Record number
820326
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