| Literature DB >> 27579212 |
Nadja Bredo Rasmussen1, Mikkel Vestergaard Olesen1, Tomasz Brudek1, Per Plenge2, Anders Bue Klein3, Jenny E Westin4, Karina Fog4, Gitta Wörtwein5, Susana Aznar1.
Abstract
The 5-HT2A receptor is highly involved in aspects of cognition and executive function and seen to be affected in neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer's disease and related to the disease pathology. Even though Parkinson's disease (PD) is primarily a motor disorder, reports of impaired executive function are also steadily being associated with this disease. Not much is known about the pathophysiology behind this. The aim of this study was thereby twofold: (1) to investigate 5-HT2A receptor binding levels in Parkinson's brains and (2) to investigate whether PD associated pathology, alpha-synuclein (AS) overexpression, could be associated with 5-HT2A alterations. Binding density for the 5-HT2A-specific radioligand [(3)H]-MDL 100.907 was measured in membrane suspensions of frontal cortex tissue from PD patients. Protein levels of AS were further measured using western blotting. Results showed higher AS levels accompanied by increased 5-HT2A receptor binding in PD brains. In a separate study, we looked for changes in 5-HT2A receptors in the prefrontal cortex in 52-week-old transgenic mice overexpressing human AS. We performed region-specific 5-HT2A receptor binding measurements followed by gene expression analysis. The transgenic mice showed lower 5-HT2A binding in the frontal association cortex that was not accompanied by changes in gene expression levels. This study is one of the first to look at differences in serotonin receptor levels in PD and in relation to AS overexpression.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27579212 PMCID: PMC4989080 DOI: 10.1155/2016/3682936
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parkinsons Dis ISSN: 2042-0080
Overview of postmortem brain tissue samples used in binding assay analysis showing sample number, diagnosis/cause of death (COD) (PD patients or controls dead of other nonneurological causes), age at time of death (age (death)), gender, and PMI (postmortem interval). CP = cardiopulmonary and GI = gastrointestinal.
| Parkinson's disease (PD) frontal cortex samples | Controls frontal cortex samples | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Diagnosis/COD | Age of death | Gender | PMI | Diagnosis/COD | Age of death | Gender | PMI |
| PD | 71 | M | 23,42 | CP | 59 | M | 61 |
| PD | 75 | M | 26,06 | GI | 81 | F | 35 |
| PD | 84 | F | 18,92 | CP | 58 | M | 43 |
| PD | 77 | M | 11,23 | GI | 74 | F | 24 |
| PD | 70 | M | 24,12 | GI | 70 | F | 72 |
| PD | 66 | M | 11,21 | GI/cancer | 69 | M | 23 |
| PD | 85 | F | 26,25 | ||||
|
| |||||||
| Mean | 75,4 | 5 M/2 F | 20,2 | Mean | 68,5 | 3 M/3 F | 43 |
PMI = postmortem interval: time from death to tissue sample collection.
Figure 1Receptor binding analysis and alpha-synuclein levels in postmortem prefrontal cortex of Parkinson's disease (PD) patients. (a) Binding assays with [3H] MDL100.907 comparing membrane suspensions from postmortem prefrontal cortex of Parkinson's disease (PD) patients and controls show higher maximum binding levels (B max) of the 5-HT2A receptor in the PD group. (b) Western blot showing higher levels of alpha-synuclein proteins in the PD brains included in the binding assay. Control = normal controls; PD = Parkinson's disease patients. Significant p < 0.05. Student's t-test with mean ± SEM.
Figure 25-HT2A receptor mouse prefrontal cortex autoradiography binding analysis and gene expression levels. (a) Results from [3H] MDL 100.907 (5-HT2A) binding. FrA [3H] MDL 100.907 binding is significantly lower in alpha-synuclein overexpressing (SNCA) mice compared to wt mice. Bars: grey: wild-type mice (n = 9); black: SNCA mice (n = 10). p < 0.05. Multiple t-test. Data illustrated with mean ± SEM. (b) Results from RT-qPCR show CT ratios (calculated using CT-ratio (receptor/reference) = 2(CT (reference) − CT (receptor))) comparing alpha-synuclein overexpressing (SNCA) and wt mice. Reference genes are Rpl13a and GAPDH. No difference in receptor gene expression was found. Bars show mean ± SEM.