Behavioral changes are not directly related to striatal monoamine levels, number of nigral neurons, or dose of parkinsonian toxin MPTP in mice |
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Authors: | Rousselet Estelle Joubert Chantal Callebert Jacques Parain Karine Tremblay Léon Orieux Gaël Launay Jean-Marie Cohen-Salmon Charles Hirsch Etienne C |
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Affiliation: | INSERM U289, Experimental Neurology and Therapeutics, H?pital de la Salpêtrière, 75013 Paris, France. |
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Abstract: | Behavioral analyses of mice intoxicated by the parkinsonian toxin 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6,-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP) have generated conflicting results. We therefore analyzed the relationship between behavioral changes, loss of monoamine levels, and loss of dopaminergic cell bodies in groups of mice intoxicated with acute or subchronic MPTP protocols. Despite a higher degree of neuronal loss in the mice intoxicated using subchronic protocols, dopamine loss was severe and homogeneous in the striatum in all groups. Dopamine levels were less severely reduced in the frontal cortex in the three groups of MPTP-intoxicated mice. Norepinephrine and serotonin levels in the striatum were decreased only in the mice intoxicated with the acute protocol. The most surprising result was that the mice intoxicated with the subchronic protocols were more active than the saline-treated mice. As reported in rats with dopamine depletion in the prefrontal cortex, the hyperactivity observed in our mice could be due to the reduced dopamine levels detected in this structure. |
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