Literature DB >> 15857623

Acute or repeated cocaine administration generates reactive oxygen species and induces antioxidant enzyme activity in dopaminergic rat brain structures.

Jean-Bernard Dietrich1, Aude Mangeol, Marie-Odile Revel, Claude Burgun, Dominique Aunis, Jean Zwiller.   

Abstract

Either a single (acute) or repeated daily (chronic) injections (1 injection/day) of 20 mg/kg cocaine for 10 days to rats was found to increase reactive oxygen species production in two dopaminergic brain structures, the frontal cortex and the striatum. We found that the mitochondrial genome was down-regulated after acute cocaine injection. Hydroperoxide and lipid peroxide generation was correlated with an increase in mitochondrial hydrogen peroxide generation and with a reduced functioning of mitochondrial complex I in response to cocaine. As judged from the measurement of caspase-3 activity and TUNEL labeling, neither acute nor chronic cocaine treatment has been found to induce apoptosis in any of the structures examined. This differs dramatically from what has been described for methamphetamine. Cocaine-induced radical formation was accompanied by the induction of the antioxidant enzymes superoxide dismutase and glutathione peroxidase, after both acute and chronic cocaine treatment. In addition, proteasome chymotrypsin-like activity was enhanced following a single cocaine injection in both cortex and striatum. It is proposed that the compensatory mechanisms to oxidative stress occurring in response to cocaine were effective in scavenging reactive oxygen species and in preventing subsequent cellular damage, thus explaining why no significant cell death was found in these brain structures.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15857623     DOI: 10.1016/j.neuropharm.2005.01.018

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuropharmacology        ISSN: 0028-3908            Impact factor:   5.250


  59 in total

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