| Literature DB >> 28725693 |
Laurie K Mischley1,2,3, Kevin E Conley1, Eric G Shankland1, Terrance J Kavanagh4, Michael E Rosenfeld2,4, John E Duda5,6, Collin C White4, Timothy K Wilbur1, Prysilla U De La Torre1,3, Jeannie M Padowski7,8.
Abstract
Glutathione (GSH) is depleted early in the course of Parkinson's disease (PD), and deficiency has been shown to perpetuate oxidative stress, mitochondrial dysfunction, impaired autophagy, and cell death. GSH repletion has been proposed as a therapeutic intervention. The objective of this study was to evaluate whether intranasally administered reduced GSH, (in)GSH, is capable of augmenting central nervous system GSH concentrations, as determined by magnetic resonance spectroscopy in 15 participants with mid-stage PD. After baseline GSH measurement, 200 mg (in)GSH was self-administered inside the scanner without repositioning, then serial GSH levels were obtained over ~1 h. Statistical significance was determined by one-way repeated measures analysis of variance. Overall, (in)GSH increased brain GSH relative to baseline (P<0.001). There was no increase in GSH 8 min after administration, although it was significantly higher than baseline at all of the remaining time points (P<0.01). This study is the first to demonstrate that intranasal administration of GSH elevates brain GSH levels. This increase persists at least 1 h in subjects with PD. Further dose-response and steady-state administration studies will be required to optimize the dosing schedule for future trials to evaluate therapeutic efficacy.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 28725693 PMCID: PMC5516583 DOI: 10.1038/npjparkd.2016.2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: NPJ Parkinsons Dis ISSN: 2373-8057
Characteristics of study participants
| Male | 11 (73%) | ||
| Female | 4 (27%) | ||
| | |||
| Mean (s.d.) | 65.5 (11.2) | 44 | 83 |
| Race: Caucasian | 15 (100%) | ||
| Years since PD diagnosis (s.d.) | 6.1 (6.2) | 0.7 | 23 |
| Mean (s.d.) | 78.9 (15.4) | 56 | 103 |
| Levodopa dose equivalents (s.d.) | 557 (477) | 0 | 1,600 |
Abbreviations: PD, Parkinson’s disease; UPDRS, Unified PD Rating Scale.
Figure 1CONSORT enrollment algorithm.
Change in brain glutathione levels (as GSH/Cr peak ratios) relative to baseline after 200 mg nasally administered GSH
| 0 (baseline) | 15 | 0.0170 (0.0046) | 0.0035 | 0.0620 | |
| 7.5 (0.0) | 15 | 0.0259 (0.0039) | 0.0080 | 0.0580 | 0.00890 (0.00507) |
| 19.9 (0.17) | 14 | 0.0364 (0.0057) | 0.0120 | 0.0760 | 0.0201 (0.00585) |
| 32.0 (0.17) | 15 | 0.0385 (0.0053) | 0.0130 | 0.0810 | 0.0215 (0.00532) |
| 44.7 (0.22) | 9 | 0.0457 (0.012) | 0.0130 | 0.114 | 0.0340 (0.0135) |
Abbreviations: GSH, glutathione; Cr, creatine.
For the baseline scans where the GSH peak was undetectable, a GSH/Cr value (lowest measured value/2) was substituted, as described in the Materials and Methods section.
For six subjects, baseline GSH levels were undetectable, and one post-dose spectrum from one subject was omitted owing to poor data quality.
Figure 2Representative fit to glutathione (GSH) peak. The GSH-edited spectrum is shown in blue. The upper red line illustrates the best fit of a 5-Gaussian model to GSH and co-edited molecules (overall fit), and the lower red line illustrates the fit of a simple Gaussian model to the GSH peak (GSH quantification). Below the plot, the residual between the spectrum and model best fit is shown in black.
Figure 3Differences in glutathione (GSH) levels, as absolute GSH (a) and GSH/Cr (b), relative to baseline versus time after 200 mg intranasally administered GSH. Data are presented as mean±s.e.m. Asterisks indicate points that are significantly different from baseline (one-way repeated measures analysis of variance comparing each point to baseline, P<0.05 after correction for multiple comparisons). Shown below are time courses of change in absolute GSH (c) and GSH/Cr (d) in individual subjects over time post dose.
Figure 4Volume of interest. For all participants, glutathione (GSH) was administered into the left nostril, and a voxel was placed over a 4×4×5-cm region centered on the left dorsal putamen at the level of the lentiform nucleus.