Literature DB >> 19582783

Amphetamine and environmentally induced hyperthermia differentially alter the expression of genes regulating vascular tone and angiogenesis in the meninges and associated vasculature.

Monzy Thomas1, Nysia I George, Tucker A Patterson, John F Bowyer.   

Abstract

An amphetamine (AMPH) regimen that does not produce a prominent blood-brain barrier breakdown was shown to significantly alter the expression of genes regulating vascular tone, immune function, and angiogenesis in vasculature associated with arachnoid and pia membranes of the forebrain. Adult-male Sprague-Dawley rats were given either saline injections during environmentally-induced hyperthermia (EIH) or four doses of AMPH with 2 h between each dose (5, 7.5, 10, and 10 mg/kg d-AMPH, s.c.) that produced hyperthermia. Rats were sacrificed either 3 h or 1 day after dosing, and total RNA and protein was isolated from the meninges, arachnoid and pia membranes, and associated vasculature (MAV) that surround the forebrain. Vip, eNos, Drd1a, and Edn1 (genes regulating vascular tone) were increased by either EIH or AMPH to varying degrees in MAV, indicating that EIH and AMPH produce differential responses to enhance vasodilatation. AMPH, and EIH to a lesser extent, elicited a significant inflammatory response at 3 h as indicated by an increased MAV expression of cytokines Il1b, Il6, Ccl-2, Cxcl1, and Cxcl2. Also, genes related to heat shock/stress and disruption of vascular homeostasis such as Icam1 and Hsp72 were also observed. The increased expression of Ctgf and Timp1 and the decreased expression of Akt1, Anpep, and Mmp2 and Tek (genes involved in stimulating angiogenesis) from AMPH exposure suggest that angiogenesis was arrested or disrupted in MAV to a greater extent by AMPH compared to EIH. Alterations in vascular-related gene expression in the parietal cortex and striatum after AMPH were less in magnitude than in MAV, indicating less of a disruption of vascular homeostasis in these two regions. Changes in the levels of insulin-like growth factor binding proteins Igfbp1, 2, and 5 in MAV, compared to those in striatum and parietal cortex, imply an interaction between these regions to regulate the levels of insulin-like growth factor after AMPH damage. Thus, the vasculature and meninges surrounding the surface of the forebrain may be an important region in which AMPHs can disrupt vascular homeostasis. Copyright 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19582783     DOI: 10.1002/syn.20661

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Synapse        ISSN: 0887-4476            Impact factor:   2.562


  7 in total

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2.  The effects of methamphetamine self-administration on cortical monoaminergic deficits induced by subsequent high-dose methamphetamine administrations.

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3.  Comparison of the global gene expression of choroid plexus and meninges and associated vasculature under control conditions and after pronounced hyperthermia or amphetamine toxicity.

Authors:  John F Bowyer; Tucker A Patterson; Upasana T Saini; Joseph P Hanig; Monzy Thomas; Luísa Camacho; Nysia I George; James J Chen
Journal:  BMC Genomics       Date:  2013-03-05       Impact factor: 3.969

4.  A visual description of the dissection of the cerebral surface vasculature and associated meninges and the choroid plexus from rat brain.

Authors:  John F Bowyer; Monzy Thomas; Tucker A Patterson; Nysia I George; Jeffrey A Runnells; Mark S Levi
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5.  Vascular-directed responses of microglia produced by methamphetamine exposure: indirect evidence that microglia are involved in vascular repair?

Authors:  John F Bowyer; Sumit Sarkar; Karen M Tranter; Joseph P Hanig; Diane B Miller; James P O'Callaghan
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Review 6.  Amphetamine- and methamphetamine-induced hyperthermia: Implications of the effects produced in brain vasculature and peripheral organs to forebrain neurotoxicity.

Authors:  John F Bowyer; Joseph P Hanig
Journal:  Temperature (Austin)       Date:  2014-11-14

7.  Brain angiotensin II in dopaminergic imbalance-derived pathologies: neuroinflammation and vascular responses.

Authors:  Victoria Belén Occhieppo; Osvaldo Martin Basmadjian; Claudia Bregonzio
Journal:  Neural Regen Res       Date:  2021-03       Impact factor: 5.135

  7 in total

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