| Literature DB >> 29408408 |
Antti Huotarinen1, Anna-Maija Penttinen2, Susanne Bäck3, Merja H Voutilainen3, Ulrika Julku2, T Petteri Piepponen3, Pekka T Männistö3, Mart Saarma2, Raimo Tuominen3, Aki Laakso4, Mikko Airavaara2.
Abstract
Several neurotrophic factors (NTF) are shown to be neuroprotective and neurorestorative in pre-clinical animal models for Parkinson's disease (PD), particularly in models where striatal dopamine neuron innervation partially exists. The results of clinical trials on late-stage patients have been modest. Subthalamic deep brain stimulation (STN DBS) is a proven treatment for a selected group of advanced PD patients. The cerebral dopamine neurotrophic factor (CDNF) is a promising therapeutic protein, but its effects in animal models of late-stage PD have remained under-researched. The interactions of NTF and STN DBS treatments have not been studied before. We found that a nigral CDNF protein alone had only a marginal effect on the behavioral deficits in a late-stage hemiparkinsonian rat model (6-OHDA MFB). However, CDNF improved the effect of acute STN DBS on front limb use asymmetry at 2 and 3 weeks after CDNF injection. STN lesion-modeling chronic stimulation-had an additive effect in reducing front limb use in the cylinder test and apomorphine-induced rotation. The combination of CDNF and acute STN DBS had a favorable effect on striatal tyrosine hydroxylase. This study presents a novel additive beneficial effect of NTF and STN DBS, which might be explained by the interaction of DBS-induced endogenous NTFs and exogenously injected CDNF. SNpc can be reached via similar trajectories used in clinical STN DBS, and this interaction is an important area for future studies.Entities:
Keywords: 6-hydroxydopamine; CDNF; GDNF; MANF; STN DBS; median forebrain bundle; neurotrophic factor
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29408408 DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2018.01.052
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuroscience ISSN: 0306-4522 Impact factor: 3.590