BACKGROUND: Phosphodiesterase 10A (PDE10A) is an important regulator of nigrostriatal dopamine (DA) neurotransmission. However, little is known on the effect of alterations in DA neurotransmission on PDE10A availability. Here, we used [18F]JNJ42259152 PET to measure changes in PDE10A availability, secondary to pharmacological alterations in DA release and to investigate whether these are D1- or D2-receptor driven. RESULTS: Acute treatment of rats using D-amphetamine (5 mg, s.c. and 1 mg/kg i.v.) did not result in a significant change in PDE10A BPND compared to baseline conditions. 5-day D-amphetamine treatment (5 mg/kg, s.c.) increased striatal PDE10A BPND compared to the baseline (+24 %, p = 0.03). Treatment with the selective D2 antagonist SCH23390 (1 mg/kg) and D-amphetamine decreased PDE10A binding (-22 %, p = 0.03). Treatment with only SCH23390 further decreased PDE10A binding (-26 %, p = 0.03). No significant alterations in PDE10A mRNA levels were observed. CONCLUSIONS: Repeated D-amphetamine treatment significantly increased PDE10A binding, which is not observed upon selective D1 receptor blocking. This study suggests a potential pharmacological interaction between PDE10A enzymes and drugs modifying DA neurotransmission. Therefore, PDE10A binding in patients with neuropsychiatric disorders might be modulated by chronic DA-related treatment.
BACKGROUND: Phosphodiesterase 10A (PDE10A) is an important regulator of nigrostriatal dopamine (DA) neurotransmission. However, little is known on the effect of alterations in DA neurotransmission on PDE10A availability. Here, we used [18F]JNJ42259152 PET to measure changes in PDE10A availability, secondary to pharmacological alterations in DA release and to investigate whether these are D1- or D2-receptor driven. RESULTS: Acute treatment of rats using D-amphetamine (5 mg, s.c. and 1 mg/kg i.v.) did not result in a significant change in PDE10A BPND compared to baseline conditions. 5-day D-amphetamine treatment (5 mg/kg, s.c.) increased striatal PDE10A BPND compared to the baseline (+24 %, p = 0.03). Treatment with the selective D2 antagonist SCH23390 (1 mg/kg) and D-amphetamine decreased PDE10A binding (-22 %, p = 0.03). Treatment with only SCH23390 further decreased PDE10A binding (-26 %, p = 0.03). No significant alterations in PDE10A mRNA levels were observed. CONCLUSIONS: Repeated D-amphetamine treatment significantly increased PDE10A binding, which is not observed upon selective D1 receptor blocking. This study suggests a potential pharmacological interaction between PDE10A enzymes and drugs modifying DA neurotransmission. Therefore, PDE10A binding in patients with neuropsychiatric disorders might be modulated by chronic DA-related treatment.
Entities:
Keywords:
Brain imaging; D-amphetamine; Dopamine neurotransmission; Phosphodiesterase 10A; Small animal PET
Dopamine (DA) is an important neurotransmitter in the brain and in
particular in the striatum, which is the primary input of the basal ganglia. DA
neurotransmission plays an important role in the regulation of motor, reward and
cognitive processes. Alterations in DA neurotransmission are key hallmarks in the
pathogenesis of several diseases in these domains such as Huntington’s disease,
Parkinson’s disease, addiction and schizophrenia (Schmidt and Reith 2010).Medium spiny neurons (MSNs) represent 90–95 % of the neurons in
striatum. MSNs are GABAergic projection neurons that integrate dopaminergic and
glutamatergic neurotransmission. Two major pathways of MSNs are known. MSNs of the
direct pathway are striatonigral neurons that project to the internal part of the
globus pallidus and the substantia nigra pars reticularis. Activation of the direct
pathway inhibits the GABAergic output of these two nuclei on the thalamus and
thereby stimulates behavioral activity. The indirect pathway consists of
striatopallidal MSNs that project to the external globus pallidus. Activation of the
indirect pathway removes the inhibition of the external globus pallidus on the
subthalamic nucleus. This ultimately increases the inhibition of the globus pallidus
and substantia nigra on the thalamus and inhibits behavioral activity (Albin et al.
1989).In the MSNs, two main DA receptor pathways can be distinguished. Both
the D1 receptor and the D2 receptor
mediate their effects through activation or inactivation of the 3’,5’-cyclic
adenosine monophosphate/Protein Kinase A (cAMP/PKA) pathway (Nishi et al.
2008). Although all MSNs are sensitive
to DA neurotransmission, a distinct distribution pattern of the DA receptor subtypes
exists. Striatonigral MSNs of the direct pathway predominantly express the
D1 receptor. When stimulated, D1
receptors activate adenylyl cyclase (AC) which initiates the cAMP/PKA cascade.
Striatopallidal neurons on the other hand predominantly express
D2 receptors. Stimulation of these
Gi mediated receptors inhibits AC resulting in an
inactivation of the indirect pathway (Fisone et al. 2007; Traynor and Neubig 2005).Since striatal excitability depends on activation or inactivation of
the cAMP/PKA pathway, concentrations of cAMP play a central role in the regulation
of the MSNs. The intracellular concentration of cAMP is determined by the balance
between its production and its degradation. Production of cAMP in striatum is
controlled by activation of AC while the degradation of cAMP is catalyzed by a class
of enzymes called phosphodiesterases (PDEs).PDE10A is a subfamily of PDEs which can hydrolyze both cAMP and cGMP,
although its affinity for cAMP is higher (Fujishige et al. 1999). It has a very limited distribution and is
mainly expressed in the MSNs of the striatum and substantia nigra (Lakics et al.
2010; Seeger et al. 2003). The role of PDE10A in cAMP metabolism,
together with its unique localization makes PDE10A a principal regulator of
nigrostriatal DA neurotransmission.Several research groups have focused on the relationship between
PDE10A activity and cAMP levels. Research conducted by Jäger et al. suggested that
PDE10A is activated by high concentrations of cAMP (Jäger et al. 2012). Since changes in DA neurotransmission
directly influence cAMP levels in striatum, it is plausible that changes in DA
neurotransmission might also induce changes in PDE10A activity. Although several
authors have investigated how PDE10A inhibition may modify DA neurotransmission
(Nishi et al. 2008; Sotty et al.
2009; Gresack et al. 2013), to our knowledge, few studies have examined
the modulation of PDE10A expression and activity by DA neurotransmission.Dlaboga et al were the first to investigate the effect a chronic
treatment with a D2 antagonist on PDE10A expression levels
(Dlaboga et al. 2008). They noticed
decreased PDE10A expression after chronic treatment with haloperidol. These data
were later contradicted by Natesan et al., who could not detect any change in PDE10A
expression and PET binding after chronic haloperidol treatment (Natesan et al.
2014). Finally, an attempt to
understand the relationship between DA neurontransmission and PDE10A was done by
Giorgi et al. (Giorgi et al. 2011).
They noticed that loss of dopaminergic nigrostriatal neurons significantly decreased
PDE10A mRNA levels in striatum.These studies suggest that changes in DA neurotransmission might
induce changes in cAMP levels and PDE10A expression. This is however still
controversial. In this study we aimed to evaluate changes in PDE10A activation or
expression secondary to changes in DA neurotransmission. In order to test this
hypothesis, we used positron emission tomography (PET) with
[18F]JNJ42259152, a validated PET tracer for PDE10A
(Celen et al. 2013; Van Laere et al.
2013a, b; Andrés et al. 2011), to quantify in vivo alterations in PDE10A binding secondary to
stimulation of the DA system. Since D1 and
D2 receptors influence cAMP levels in opposite ways, we
evaluated the relative importance of D1 and
D2 receptors in such response to DA alterations, using
various pharmacological treatment schedules and imaging with the
D2 antagonist
[11C]raclopride.
Methods
Animals
Healthy female Wistar rats (body weight of 200–250 g at start of
experiments) were used. The animals were housed in individually ventilated cages
in a thermoregulated (22 °C) and humidity-controlled environment under a
12 h/12 h day/night cycle with free access to food and water. All animal
experiments were conducted according to the Belgian code of practice for the care
and use of animals and with approval of the KU Leuven ethical committee for animal
experiments.
Animal treatment
Rats were divided into eight different treatment groups which are
outlined in Table 1.
Table 1
Overview of the different treatment groups (* saline treatment,
equivalent volumes)
Experiment
Treatment
Injection route
Dose (mg/kg)
Duration of treatment
Time before scan
n
1
Amphetamine
SC
5
Acute
60 min
6
2
Amphetamine
IV
1
Acute
5 min
5
3
Saline (test/retest)
SC
*
Acute
60 min
3
4
Saline (test/retest)
IV
*
Acute
5 min
3
5
Amphetamine
SC
5
5 days
4 h
5
6
Amphetamine+ SCH23390
SC
51
5 days
4 h
6
7
SCH23390
SC
1
5 days
4 h
5
8
Saline
SC
*
5 days
4 h
3
Rats undergoing acute treatment were scanned at baseline
conditions and after acute treatment. The 5 day treatment consisted of a
baseline scan, a scan immediately after the 5 day treatment and a scan
10 days after the last treatment
Overview of the different treatment groups (* saline treatment,
equivalent volumes)Rats undergoing acute treatment were scanned at baseline
conditions and after acute treatment. The 5 day treatment consisted of a
baseline scan, a scan immediately after the 5 day treatment and a scan
10 days after the last treatment
Single-dose treatment
At the start of the experiment, animals were scanned using
[18F]JNJ42259152 prior to any treatment to asses
baseline BPND values. In order to evaluate the acute,
single-dose effects of D-amphetamine administration on PDE10A, rats were treated
with D-amphetamine (5 mg/kg, solution 2.5 mg/ml in saline, s.c. in awake
animals) and were scanned with [18F]JNJ42259152
60 min after D-amphetamine injection (Experiment 1; n = 6). A second group of rats (Experiment 2; n = 5) was scanned 5 min after D-amphetamine
treatment (1 mg/kg, i.v. in anaesthetized rats). Striatum
BPND values for
[18F]JNJ42259152 after treatment were compared to
baseline BPND values acquired in the same rat. A similar
treatment protocol with saline (2 ml/kg, s.c.) was used as a control to check
for the potential effect of stress induced by the acute treatment protocols.
Additionally, scans in saline treated animals were also used to calculate the
test-retest variability of basal BPND values as a
function of time (Experiments 3 and 4; n = 3
per group). Test-retest variability was calculated as
|BP1 – BP2| /
(BP1 + BP2) × 200 with
BP1 and BP2 the
BPND values from the baseline and saline treated scan
respectively acquired in the same animal. For all experiments, there was a
maximum time-gap of 1 week between baseline scan and test scan.
Chronic treatment
The effect of chronic dosage with D-amphetamine was evaluated
after a 5-day schedule. In order to evaluate the relative contribution of
D1 versus D2 receptors in the
D-amphetamine response, rats were also treated with SCH23390, a known
D1 receptor antagonist (Bourne 2001). All rats were first scanned at baseline
conditions prior to any treatment using
[18F]JNJ42259152. After their baseline scans, the
different groups of animals were subjected to different treatment protocols (See
Table 1). The treatment protocol
consisted of subcutaneous injection in awake animals for five consecutive days
with 5 mg/kg D-amphetamine (Experiment 5; n = 5), a combination of 5 mg/kg D-amphetamine and 1 mg/kg SCH23390
(Experiment 6; n = 6) or 1 mg/kg SCH23390
alone (Experiment 7; n = 5) once per day. At
the fifth day of treatment, rats were scanned using
[18F]JNJ42259152. A time gap of 4 h was left
between the final injection and the start of the microPET scan in order to
exclude any potential acute effects of the treatment. Finally, the rats were
left untreated for another ten days after which the PDE10A binding potentials
were again determined. A subset of the animals treated with only D-amphetamine
(Experiment 5; n = 3) was additionally
scanned with [11C]raclopride to visualize
D2-receptor availability at the same time points. The
influence of the chronic D-amphetamine treatment on PDE10A
BPND values was assessed in a control group of rats
treated for 5 consecutive days with equivalent volumes (2 ml/kg) of saline
(Experiment 8; n = 3).
Radiochemistry
[18F]JNJ42259152 was radiolabeled by
alkylation of the corresponding precursor with
[18F]fluoroethyl bromide following a previously
published method (Andrés et al. 2011). The radiotracer was obtained with a radiochemical
purity > 98 % and a specific activity of 62–193 GBq/μmol (injected mass
dose = 0.3–9 μg/kg) at the time of injection.
[11C]Raclopride was synthesized according to a
previously published method (Van Laere et al. 2010) with a radiochemical purity >98 % and a specific
activity of 103–120 GBq/μmol (injected mass dose = 0.3–1.1 μg/kg) at time of
injection.
Small animal PET imaging
Small animal PET imaging was performed with a FOCUS 220 tomograph
(Siemens/Concorde Microsystems, Knoxville, TN). Rats were anesthetized and kept
under anesthesia during the entire scan using 2.5 % isoflurane in oxygen
(1 L/min). Animals were injected intravenously with about 50 MBq of
[18F]JNJ42259152 or about 70 MBq of
[11C]raclopride and scanned dynamically for 90 min.
Data were acquired in a 128x128x95 matrix with a pixel width of 0.949 mm and a
slice thickness of 0.796 mm. The scan data were acquired in list mode. Acquisition
data were Fourier re-binned in 24 time frames (4 × 15 s, 4 × 60 s, 5 × 180 s, 8 ×
5 min, 3 × 10 min) and reconstructed using maximum a posteriori iterative
reconstruction (MAP; 18 iterations, 9 subsets, fixed resolution: 1.5 mm). The
summed images (all timeframes) of the reconstructed data were spatially normalized
to an in-house created [11C]raclopride template of the
Wistar rat brain. The affine transformation was then used to normalize all time
frames of the dynamic small animal PET data set to allow automated and symmetric
volumes of interest (VOIs) analyses. Time activity curves (TACs) were generated
for striatum and cerebellum using PMOD software (v 3.2, PMOD Technologies, Zurich,
Switzerland). For [18F]JNJ42259152, striatal binding
potential values (BPND) in striatum were extracted from the
TACs using a Logan reference plot as previously validated by Celen and coworkers
(Celen et al. 2013). K2’ and t*
values for the Logan reference analysis were estimated using a two-tissue
reference model. [11C]Raclopride binding was quantified
using BPND values derived from a simplified reference
tissue model as previously described (Ikoma et al. 2009). Cerebellum was used as a reference region for both
reference tissue models to quantify [18F]JNJ42259152
and [11C]raclopride binding in different brain regions.
PDE10A BPND images were generated by voxel based parametric
mapping. Voxelwise parametric BPND images were constructed
using a Logan reference tissue model using the cerebellum as reference region. For
[11C]Raclopride, BPND images
were generated using a SRTM approach.
Quantitative analysis of striatal mRNA levels
Tissue extraction
Healthy female Wistar rats were treated for five consecutive days
with D-amphetamine (n = 9, 5 mg/kg, s.c.) or
equivalent volumes of saline (n = 9). At the
final day of treatment, rats were anaesthetized using 2.5 % isoflurane in oxygen
(1 L/min) and sacrificed by decapitation. Striatum was then isolated and used
for mRNA quantification.
Real-time quantitative PCR
RNA purification from striatum was performed with an RNeasy kit
(Qiagen, Hilden, Germany), including DNaseI digestion, and extracted RNA was
eluted with RNase-free H2O. 1.2 μg RNA was used for
subsequent cDNA synthesis using random primers and SuperScript® III First-Strand
Synthesis System (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, US) according to manufacturer’s
protocol.Real-Time Quantitative PCR (RTQ-PCR) was performed on an ABI
Prism 7900-HT Sequence Detection System (Applied Biosystems, Lennik, Belgium). A
qPCR core kit without dUTP (Eurogentec, Seraing, Belgium) was combined,
according to protocol, with pre-designed Taqman Gene Expression Assays (Applied
Biosystems) to quantify the genes of interest; PDE10A (Rn00673152_m1),
D1 receptor (Rn03062203_s1) and
D2 receptor (Rn00561126_m1) and internal control genes
corresponding to glucuronidase b (GUSB, Rn00566655_m1), hydroxymethylbilane
synthase (HMBS, Rn00565886_m1), phosphoglycerate kinase 1 (PGK1, Rn00821429_g1),
peptidylpropyl isomerase b (PPIB, Rn03302274_m1) and transferrin receptor (TFRC,
Rn01474701_m1, all Applied Biosystems). Serial dilutions of cDNA were used to
generate standard curves with all Taqman assays in order to calculate PCR
efficiencies (all between 95 % and 105 %) and quantify expression levels.
Samples were assessed in duplicate. Finally GeNorm software was used to identify
the most stably expressed internal control genes (http://genomebiology.com/2002/3/7/research/0034). These genes were then used to normalize PDE10A,
D1 and D2 receptor
expression.
General statistics
Reported values are reported as mean ± SD. Conventional statistical
analysis was carried out using Graphpad Prism 5.1 (Graphpad Software, La Jolla,
CA, US). A non-parametric Wilcoxon signed rank test was performed to compare
BPND values at the different time points in each
treatment group. Significance was accepted at the 95 % probability level.
Results
Saline treated animals
In order to test the effect of treatment protocols on PDE10A
BPND values, rats were treated with equivalent volumes of
saline (Experiments 3, 4 and 8). When comparing PDE10A BPND
values after acute saline treatment (average
BPND = 1.40 ± 0.20) and at baseline conditions
(BPND = 1.61 ± 0.11), no significant changes could be
found (Table 2). Additionally, the same
BPND values derived from the acute saline treatment rats
were used to calculate test-retest variability as described earlier. Individual
and average test-retest variability are shown in Table 2. Likewise, in the chronically saline-treated animals
(Experiment 8) no significant changes could be detected
(BPND = 2.61 ± 0.45; 2.51 ± 0.13; 2.27 ± 0.61 at
baseline, day 5 and day 15 of the experiment respectively).
Table 2
Test-retest statistics for
[18F]JNJ42259152 in rat striatum
Animal
BP1 (baseline)
BP2 (saline treated)
Test-retest variability (%)
1
1.71
1.21
34.8
2
1.48
1.53
2.5
3
1.58
1.22
25.9
4
1.51
1.69
10.4
5
1.62
1.24
26.3
6
1.69
1.51
11.9
Mean ± SD
1,60 ± 0.09
1.40 ± 0.20
18.6 ± 12.2
Test retest variability was calculated as
|BP1 – BP2| /
(BP1 + BP2) ×
200
Test-retest statistics for
[18F]JNJ42259152 in rat striatumTest retest variability was calculated as
|BP1 – BP2| /
(BP1 + BP2) ×
200
Single dose D-amphetamine treatment
Representative images of PDE10A BPND values
for [18F]JNJ42259152 in the brain acquired at baseline
conditions and after single dose treatment with D-amphetamine are presented in
Fig. 1a-b. Single dose treatment with
D-amphetamine did not influence striatal PDE10A binding. Quantification of
BPND values in experiment 1 showed no change in PDE10A
BPND between baseline conditions
(BPND = 2.20 ± 0.51) and 60 min after subcutaneous
administration of D-amphetamine (BPND = 1.95 ± 0.39,
Fig. 1c)). Similarly, the rats of
experiment 2 did not have significantly different BPND
5 min after i.v. D-amphetamine injection
(BPND = 1.82 ± 0.42) compared to baseline conditions
(BPND = 1.98 ± 0.33; Fig. 1d).
Fig. 1
[18F]JNJ42259152
BPND values after acute amphetamine treatment.
Left: Transversal images of PDE10A
binding in the brain at baseline conditions vs 60 min after s.c.
amphetamine treatment (a) and at baseline
conditions vs 5 min after i.v. amphetamine treatment (b). Images are overlaid on a VOI map and
presented as averaged, parametric BPND images
(Logan Reference) at baseline conditions and amphetamine treated
conditions. Right: Comparison of
BPND in striatum at baseline conditions and 1 h
after subcutaneous injection of amphetamine (c) and 5 min after intravenous injection of amphetamine
(d). No significant difference was
found
[18F]JNJ42259152
BPND values after acute amphetamine treatment.
Left: Transversal images of PDE10A
binding in the brain at baseline conditions vs 60 min after s.c.
amphetamine treatment (a) and at baseline
conditions vs 5 min after i.v. amphetamine treatment (b). Images are overlaid on a VOI map and
presented as averaged, parametric BPND images
(Logan Reference) at baseline conditions and amphetamine treated
conditions. Right: Comparison of
BPND in striatum at baseline conditions and 1 h
after subcutaneous injection of amphetamine (c) and 5 min after intravenous injection of amphetamine
(d). No significant difference was
found
Chronic treatment
Five day D-amphetamine treatment (Experiment 5)
After treatment with D-amphetamine for five consecutive days,
striatal PDE10A BPND was 24 ± 12 % higher
(BPND = 2.28 ± 0.76) compared to the baseline values
(BPND = 1.84 ± 0.60; baseline vs day 5: p = 0.03, Fig. 2). After a washout period of 10 days, average
BPND values were slightly higher
(BPND = 2.25 ± 0.54) compared to baseline conditions,
however this difference was not significant (baseline vs day 15; p = 0.22).
Fig. 2
[18F]JNJ42259152
BPND values after a 5-days amphetamine
treatment. Left: Transversal images
of PDE10A binding in brain. Images are overlaid on a VOI map and
presented as averaged, parametric BPND images
(Logan Reference) at baseline conditions (a), at day 5 (b) and day
15 (c) of the experiment. Right: Averaged (d) and individual (e)
BPND values in striatum of amphetamine treated
rats at baseline conditions, after 5 days of amphetamine treatment (day
5) and after 10 days of washout (day 15). Each line represents a
repeated measurement in a single rat at different stages of treatment.
Averaged data are presented as mean ± SD. Wilcoxon matched pair test;
*p < 0.05
[18F]JNJ42259152
BPND values after a 5-days amphetamine
treatment. Left: Transversal images
of PDE10A binding in brain. Images are overlaid on a VOI map and
presented as averaged, parametric BPND images
(Logan Reference) at baseline conditions (a), at day 5 (b) and day
15 (c) of the experiment. Right: Averaged (d) and individual (e)
BPND values in striatum of amphetamine treated
rats at baseline conditions, after 5 days of amphetamine treatment (day
5) and after 10 days of washout (day 15). Each line represents a
repeated measurement in a single rat at different stages of treatment.
Averaged data are presented as mean ± SD. Wilcoxon matched pair test;
*p < 0.05On a subset of these animals (n = 3), D2 receptor availability was
quantified using [11C]raclopride. No significant
difference in striatal D2 receptor binding could be found
between the baseline conditions (BPND = 2.08 ± 0.28) and
day 5 (BPND = 1.93 ± 0.11) or day 15
(BPND = 2.25 ± 0.45) of the experiment
(Fig. 3) (baseline vs day 5, p = 0.25; baseline vs day 15, p = 0.37).
Fig. 3
[11C]Raclopride
BPND values after a 5-days amphetamine
treatment. Left: Transversal images
of D2 receptor binding in the brain. Images are
overlaid on a VOI map and presented as averaged, parametric
BPND images (SRTM) at baseline conditions
(a), at day 5 (b) and day 15 (c) of the
experiment. Right: Averaged
(d) and individual (e) BPND values in
striatum of amphetamine treated rats at baseline conditions, after
5 days of amphetamine treatment (day 5) and after 10 days of washout
(day 15). Each line represents a repeated measurement in a single rat at
different stages of treatment. Averaged data are presented as mean ± SD.
No significant difference was observed
[11C]Raclopride
BPND values after a 5-days amphetamine
treatment. Left: Transversal images
of D2 receptor binding in the brain. Images are
overlaid on a VOI map and presented as averaged, parametric
BPND images (SRTM) at baseline conditions
(a), at day 5 (b) and day 15 (c) of the
experiment. Right: Averaged
(d) and individual (e) BPND values in
striatum of amphetamine treated rats at baseline conditions, after
5 days of amphetamine treatment (day 5) and after 10 days of washout
(day 15). Each line represents a repeated measurement in a single rat at
different stages of treatment. Averaged data are presented as mean ± SD.
No significant difference was observed
Five day SCH23390 and D-amphetamine treatment (Experiment 6)
Treatment of rats with a combination of the
D1 receptor antagonist SCH23390 and D-amphetamine
decreased PDE10A binding (Experiment 6, Fig. 4). Binding potentials were 20 ± 16 % lower after five
consecutive days of treatment (BPND = 1.73 ± 0.18)
compared to baseline conditions (BPND = 2.23 ± 0.43)
acquired in the same animals (baseline vs day 5; p = 0.03). After an additional 10-days washout period, PDE10A
binding potentials augmented back to PDE10A binding at baseline conditions
(BPND = 1.89 ± 0.25; baseline vs day 15 p = 0.11).
Fig. 4
[18F]JNJ42259152
BPND values after 5 days treatment with
amphetamine and SCH23390. Left:
Transversal images of PDE10A binding in the brain. Images are overlaid
on a VOI map and presented as averaged, parametric
BPND images (Logan Reference) at baseline
conditions (a), at day 5 (b) and day 15 (c) of the experiment. Right: Averaged (d) and
individual (e)
BPND values in striatum of
SCH23390 + amphetamine treated rats at baseline conditions, after 5 days
of amphetamine treatment (day 5) and after 10 days of washout (day 15).
Each line represents a repeated measurement in a single rat at different
stages of treatment. Averaged data are presented as mean ± SD. Wilcoxon
matched pair test; *p < 0.05
[18F]JNJ42259152
BPND values after 5 days treatment with
amphetamine and SCH23390. Left:
Transversal images of PDE10A binding in the brain. Images are overlaid
on a VOI map and presented as averaged, parametric
BPND images (Logan Reference) at baseline
conditions (a), at day 5 (b) and day 15 (c) of the experiment. Right: Averaged (d) and
individual (e)
BPND values in striatum of
SCH23390 + amphetamine treated rats at baseline conditions, after 5 days
of amphetamine treatment (day 5) and after 10 days of washout (day 15).
Each line represents a repeated measurement in a single rat at different
stages of treatment. Averaged data are presented as mean ± SD. Wilcoxon
matched pair test; *p < 0.05
Five day SCH23390 treatment (Experiment 7)
In order to study the BPND changes due to
SCH23390 treatment in the absence of D-amphetamine, another group of rats
(Experiment 7, Fig. 5) was treated for
five consecutive days with the D1 receptor antagonist
only. Also in this case treatment resulted in a significant decrease of PDE10A
binding (BPND = 2.20 ± 0.52) compared to baseline
conditions (BPND = 2.99 ± 0.59, p = 0.03). This decrease was however slightly higher compared to
the decrease observed after treatment with a combination of D-amphetamine and
SCH32290 (- 22 % after SCH23390 and D-amphetamine treatment versus – 27 ± 10 %
after SCH23390 treatment). After a washout period of 10 days, binding potentials
returned to the levels of the baseline scan
(BPND = 2.82 ± 0.55, Fig. 5; baseline vs day 15: p = 0.22).
Fig. 5
[18F]JNJ42259152
BPND values after 5 days treatment with
SCH23390. Left: Transversal images of
PDE10A binding in the brain. Images are overlaid on a VOI map and
presented as averaged, parametric BPND images
(Logan Reference) at baseline conditions (a), at day 5 (b) and day
15 (c) of the experiment. Right: Averaged (d) and individual (e)
BPND values in striatum of SCH23390 treated
rats at baseline conditions, after 5 days of amphetamine treatment (day
5) and after 10 days of washout (day 15). Each line represents a
repeated measurement in a single rat at different stages of treatment.
Wilcoxon matched pair test; *p < 0.05, **p < 0.005
[18F]JNJ42259152
BPND values after 5 days treatment with
SCH23390. Left: Transversal images of
PDE10A binding in the brain. Images are overlaid on a VOI map and
presented as averaged, parametric BPND images
(Logan Reference) at baseline conditions (a), at day 5 (b) and day
15 (c) of the experiment. Right: Averaged (d) and individual (e)
BPND values in striatum of SCH23390 treated
rats at baseline conditions, after 5 days of amphetamine treatment (day
5) and after 10 days of washout (day 15). Each line represents a
repeated measurement in a single rat at different stages of treatment.
Wilcoxon matched pair test; *p < 0.05, **p < 0.005Identification of the most stable household gene using GeNorm
demonstrated that GUSB and HMBS were the most stable. These two genes where
therefore used for normalization of D1 receptor,
D2 receptor and PDE10A expression. Normalized
CT values for D1,
D2 and PDE10A acquired in D-amphetamine and saline
treated rats are displayed in Fig. 6.
After comparison of normalized D1,
D2 and PDE10A mRNA levels in stratum of saline and
D-amphetamine treated animals, no significant alterations could be
detected.
Fig. 6
mRNA quantification in amphetamine and saline treated animals.
Normalized quantities for D1,
D2 and PDE10A acquired in amphetamine and saline
treated. GUSB and HMBS were used for the normalization of quantities
values. Data are presented as mean ± SD. No significant difference in mRNA
levels of amphetamine and saline treated animals could be
found
mRNA quantification in amphetamine and saline treated animals.
Normalized quantities for D1,
D2 and PDE10A acquired in amphetamine and saline
treated. GUSB and HMBS were used for the normalization of quantities
values. Data are presented as mean ± SD. No significant difference in mRNA
levels of amphetamine and saline treated animals could be
found
Discussion
Alterations in DA neurotransmission are key pathological hallmarks in
many neurological and psychiatric disorders such as Huntington’s disease,
Parkinson’s disease, addiction and schizophrenia (Schmidt and Reith 2010). Furthermore, altering DA neurotransmission
is an important mechanism of several drugs commonly used in the treatment of these
diseases. Since PDE10A is dominantly expressed in the striatal MSNs, we hypothesized
that alterations in DA neurotransmission might also influence PDE10A binding through
feedback on the cAMP/PKA pathway.In the present study, we used
[18F]JNJ42259152 small animal PET to quantify PDE10A
binding in vivo. The quantification of PDE10A using BPND
values acquired by Logan reference plot has been extensively evaluated by Celen et
al. (Celen et al. 2013). When comparing
different BPND values at baseline conditions acquired over
the different experiments, a broad range of baseline BPND
values in the different experiments was observed. The reason of this variation was
not clear. JNJ42259152 is a PDE10A inhibitor, so potentially a mass dose effect need
to be taken into consideration. The specific activity range of
[18F]JNJ42259152 at the time of injection showed a
relatively broad range (62–196 GBq/μmol, administered mass dose 0.14–0.45 μg) that
originates from the fact that multiple scan sessions were conducted with the same
batch of [18F]JNJ42259152. For each individual rat
however, the specific activity at the start of the scan did not differ much between
the scans obtained at different time points. In addition, we did not observe any
correlation between BPND values and specific activity of the
tracer (Additional file 1). Additionally,
since anesthesia might have an influence on the response to D-amphetamine (McCormick
et al. 2011), the level of isoflurane
used to anesthetize the animals was kept constant throughout the whole
experiment.Therefore, we can assume that the large variation of baseline
BPND values is probably a result of inter-individual
variation such as deviations in baseline PDE10A expression levels or PDE10A
activity. To investigate this hypothesis, we compared BPND
values acquired in rats from the different provides in this study (Harlan and
Janvier). Our data suggested that the baseline BPND values
acquired in Janvier Wistar rats were significantly higher compared to the
BPND values acquired in Haran Wistar rats (p = 0.001; Additional file 2). Therefore we can conclude that there could indeed be a large
inter-individual variation causing the broad range of baseline
BPND values.One of the main advantages of PET imaging however is that it allows
to repeatedly scan the same animal under different conditions, provided a suitable
reference region can be found. Due to the selective expression of PDE10A in
striatum, cerebellum can be used as a reference region for PDE10A quantification
using [18F]JNJ42259152 (Celen et al. 2013; Van Laere et al. 2013b). Hence, the baseline scan of an animal can
be used as an internal control for the PET scans obtained in several conditions in
the same animal. This allows paired statistical analysis which looks at changes in
BPND values during the different treatment stages rather
than comparing absolute group-averaged BPND values.
Therefore, the bias caused by inter-individual variation on the results is expected
to be minimal. Additionally, we determined the test-retest variability of the saline
treated animals. In the different experiments, the changes in PDE10A
BPND values are larger than the calculated test-retest
variability. Therefore we can conclude that the differences observed in our study
are significantly larger than the statistical variation in baseline PDE10A
BPND levels.The treatment protocols in this study were designed to evaluate the
effects of alterations in DA neurotransmission on striatal PDE10A binding. In order
to stimulate DA release, we treated animals with 5 mg/kg D-amphetamine (s.c.), a
dose commonly used in literature for D-amphetamine treatment (Yin et al.
2006; Shi and McGinty 2011). Injection of animals with D-amphetamine
increases synaptic DA levels by blocking and reversing the DA reuptake transporter
(Robertson et al. 2009). Striatal DA
release secondary to amphetamine was quantified by Kuczenski et al (Kuczenski
1986). Their research showed that at
a dose of 3 mg/kg amphetamine, a maximum DA release in striatum was achieved which
could not be increased by using higher dosages. Therefore, a maximum effect can be
expected after amphetamine dosage of 5 mg/kg. In striatum, the increased DA release
can potentially stimulate both the D1 as the
D2 receptor pathway resulting in increased
(D1) or decreased (D2) cAMP levels
in the postsynaptic neurons (Albin et al. 1989). Since the expression of PDE10A is also most pronounced in
these neurons (Lakics et al. 2010;
Seeger et al. 2003), it is likely that
the alterations in cAMP might also induce changes in PDE10A activity and/or
expression as an effective compensating mechanism to normalize cAMP levels.Recent research showed that the effect of PDE10A inhibitors was
dependent on the activation state of both the direct as the indirect pathway of DA
neurotransmission (Megens et al. 2014).
Further evidence on the differential effect of PDE10 inhibition depending on the
activation state of D1 and D2 pathways
can be found in the behavioral differences in different PDE10A KO mice. C57 KO mice
with genetic background of C57Bl6 (high dopaminergic tone) show increase in
amphetamine-stimulated locomotor activity (Siuciak et al. 2008), while PDE10 DBA KO mice have similar
amphetamine-stimulated locomotor activity as WT mice (Siuciak et al. 2006). These data indeed suggest that there is an
interaction between PDE10A and DA neurotransmission. Additionally these data could
indicate that both the D1 as the D2
pathway influence PDE10A in different ways.Since the stress of the treatment protocols can induce several
physiological changes, the treatment itself might also influence PDE10A microPET
acquisition and/or PDE10A expression. In order to evaluate the influence of the
treatment protocol, treatment with saline was included as control (Experiments 3, 4
and 8). Both acute and chronic treatment with saline did not result in a change of
PDE10A BPND values, indicating that the treatment protocol as
such did not affect the results to a measurable extent.In the first two experiments we tested the effect of acute
D-amphetamine treatment on PDE10A tracer binding. PDE10A binding after acute
D-amphetamine treatment did not change significantly compared to baseline
conditions. As stated above, postsynaptic neurons might adapt to changes in cAMP by
modifying hydrolysis of cAMP. In literature, several lines of evidence imply
increased cAMP levels in striatum secondary to D-amphetamine treatment (Ren et al.
2009; Simpson et al. 1995). Ren et al. investigated cAMP levels in
different brain regions 10 min after an i.v. challenge of amphetamine (doses:
0.25–3 mg/kg). They demonstrated 50 % higher cAMP levels after i.v. injection of
amphetamine (>1 mg/kg) compared to baseline. The lack of PDE10A binding change
observed in our initial data may be explained by the short time period between
D-amphetamine treatment and the PDE10A microPET determination. Jaber et al. reported
no change in D1 or D2 receptor
transcription three hours after injection of 5 mg/kg D-amphetamine (Jaber et al.
1995). This lack of alteration in the
DA receptors could indicate that the expression of a more downstream effector of the
DA neurotransmitter such as PDE10A might not be changed either.Additionally, literature data has shown that the
D1 and D2 receptors affect AC
activity (and as a result also the cAMP levels) in opposing ways (Albin et al.
1989). Since changes in cAMP would be
the driving force for changes in PDE10A (Jäger et al. 2012), both receptors would also induce opposite changes in PDE10A.
To our knowledge, there is no evidence of a differential selectivity of DA between
the D1 receptor pathway and the D2
receptor pathway when animals are treated with D-amphetamine at dosages similar to
the dose used in our experiment. This could mean that despite the potential local
change in cAMP levels after acute D-amphetamine injection, it is plausible that the
overall striatal cAMP concentrations remain unchanged. As a result, the average
PDE10A levels in all the neurons of striatum would also remain unchanged.
Furthermore, desensitization of the D1 receptor pathway
(Roseboom and Gnegy 1989) and
upregulation of the presynaptic D2 receptor (Tomić et al.
1997) were observed secondary to
acute D-amphetamine treatment. This implies that although cAMP levels rapidly
increase after acute D-amphetamine treatment (Ren et al. 2009; Simpson et al. 1995), compensating mechanisms, such as receptor
internalization (Skinbjerg et al. 2010)
or desensitization (Roseboom and Gnegy 1989) can normalize cAMP levels and minimize the impact on
downstream effectors such as PDE10A.In chronic D-amphetamine treatment on the other hand, it is generally
accepted that the D1 receptor plays a more dominant role in
the development of sensitization (Shi and McGinty 2011; Wright et al. 2013; Vanderschuren and Kalivas 2000). After 5 days of D-amphetamine treatment, PDE10A binding was
found to be significantly higher compared to baseline conditions. The increase in
PDE10A binding could conceivably be an indirect and compensating mechanism secondary
to altered cAMP levels which would be caused by an increased
D1 receptor stimulation dominating
D2 receptor stimulation. This theory is sustained by the
work of Jäger et al. and Handa et al. who showed that cAMP binds to the GAF-B domain
of PDE10A and that this binding activates PDE10A enzymatic activity (Jäger et al.
2012; Handa et al. 2008). Their data are however still controversial
since Matthiesen et al. and Russwurm et al. did not observe any changes in PDE10A
activity secondary to cAMP alterations (Matthiesen and Nielsen 2009; Russwurm et al. 2015). Further research will be necessary to
investigate the exact mechanism of increased PDE10A binding observed in our
studies.In order to clarify whether the D2 receptor
plays a role in this the chronic response, a subset of the 5-days D-amphetamine
treated animals (n = 3) was additionally scanned
with 11C labeled raclopride. If the
D2 receptor would be involved, changes in
D2 receptor imaging would have been expected. No
significant changes could however be found after the treatment or washout period
compared to baseline. These results were further confirmed by
D2 receptor mRNA quantification which detected no change in
D2 receptor mRNA levels. These data were also in line with
data acquired by Richtand et al., who also observed no change in transcription of
the DA receptors after a five-days D-amphetamine treatment (Richtand et al.
1997).The role of the D2 receptor in sensitization
can be further questioned based on results obtained by Dlaboga et al. (Dlaboga et
al. 2008). In their research, they used
quantitative immunoblot analysis to quantify PDE10A expression after treatment with
haloperidol, a selective D2/3 receptor antagonist. After a
21-day treatment of rats with haloperidol, they could detect a significant increase
in PDE10A expression. When the D2 receptor on the other hand
would be activated by D-amphetamine treatment, a decreased PDE10A binding can be
expected. We however discovered that repeated stimulation of the DA
neurotransmission by D-amphetamine increases in vivo PDE10A binding. Overall, our
results and the above mentioned previous literature, gives us indications that the
D2 receptor does not play a dominant role in the chronic
D-amphetamine response. These data were however later contradicted by Natesan et al.
who did not observe any change in PDE10A expression and PET signal after chronic
haloperidol treatment (28 days) (Natesan et al. 2014).In order to further confirm the hypothesis that activation of the
D1 receptor pathway is responsible for the observed
increase in PDE10A binding, we chronically treated another group of rats with a
combination of D-amphetamine and SCH23390, a selective inhibitor of the
D1 receptor (Experiment 6) (Bourne 2001). The dose we used for SCH23390 treatment
(1 mg/kg every day) has previously been reported (Hess et al. 1986). Simultaneous activation of the DA
neurotransmission, combined with selective blocking of the D1
receptor pathway significantly decreased PDE10A availability (Fig. 4). This confirms that after chronic stimulation of the
dopaminergic system, D1 and not D2
receptor activation is likely responsible for the observed increase in PDE10A
binding. The importance of the D1 receptor after chronic DA
stimulation was also suggested by data of Selemon et al. who noticed that
D1 receptor antagonism can completely reverse the effects
of D-amphetamine sensitization (Selemon et al. 2010). Treatment of rats with only SCH23390 for 5 days decreased
the PDE10A binding slightly more compared to the rats treated with a combination of
D-amphetamine and SCH23390. This difference can be expected since D-amphetamine
increases the synaptic DA levels which compete with SCH23390 for
D1 receptor binding. Considering the higher affinity of
SCH23390 to the D1 receptor than endogenous DA (Bourne
2001), the relative decrease in
PDE10A binding in the SCH23390 treated animals does not differ much from that in the
SCH23390/D-amphetamine treated group.Finally, we further investigated the alteration in
[18F]JNJ42259152 BPND observed
in D-amphetamine treated animals. Since BPND equals in vivo
ratio of Bmax over KD, the observed
increase in [18F]JNJ42259152 BPND
could potentially be caused by a change in PDE10A expression or/and a change in
affinity of the tracer to PDE10A. In order to differentiate between these two
potential mechanisms, we investigated PDE10A mRNA levels in striatum of 5-days
D-amphetamine treated animals. PDE10A mRNA levels can be an indication for PDE10A
expression, however changes in translation, mobilization of PDE10A and activation of
PDE10A could not be excluded. Redistribution of PDE10A secondary to changes in cAMP
could also have contributed to the observed change. Several research groups have
shown that PDE10A localization can be regulated in response to changes in cAMP
levels (Russwurm et al. 2015; Charych
et al. 2010). Our data did not show any
significant difference in mRNA levels between D-amphetamine treated and saline
treated animals. This indicates that the observed changes in
[18F]JNJ42259152 BPND might be
caused by a change in [18F]JNJ42259152 affinity for
PDE10A rather than a change in PDE10A expression. Although the differences are
small, our data demonstrate changes in PDE10A BPND
independent from PDE10A expression. Since BPND values are
often used in quantification of PDE10A as a measure of expression, it is important
to also take affinity effects into account when quantifying PDE10A. Additionally,
interactions between DA neurotransmission clearly point out that PDE10A imaging
might be biased in patients treated with dopaminergic drugs.The mechanism by which the affinity increased was not investigated in
this study, however this could be a response mechanism to the increased cAMP levels
in D-amphetamine treated animals. Although there still is some controversy on the
matter, Jäger et al. observed that binding of cAMP to the regulatory GAF domain of
PDE10A activates the enzyme (Jäger et al. 2012). A potential mechanism for PDE activation was suggested by
Pandit et al. who investigated allosteric regulation of PDE2. In native state,
catalytic sites of dimerized PDE2 are packed against each other. Binding of cGMP to
the GAF domain of PDE2 rotates the catalytic domain and facilitates the binding of
cAMP (Pandit et al. 2009). A similar
mechanism for PDE10A can be conceivable since PDE10A also has an allosteric binding
site for cAMP. Since [18F]JNJ42259152 binds to the same
pocket in the catalytic domain as cAMP, activation of PDE10A would not only
facilitate cAMP but also [18F]JNJ42259152 binding to the
catalytic domain. Further investigation of the effect of cAMP on
[18F]JNJ42259152 binding is currently ongoing to fully
understand the mechanism of the alterations observed here.
Conclusion
In conclusion, we showed that chronic activation of DA
neurotransmission increases striatal [18F]JNJ42259152
binding to PDE10A. Since many drugs used in neuropsychiatry alter DA
neurotransmission, PDE10A binding quantified by PET imaging in CNS disorders may be
biased by treatment with dopaminergic drugs Activation of the
D1 over the D2 receptor pathway is
responsible for the effects of chronic D-amphetamine exposure.PDE10A binding potential and specific
activity. Correlation analysis of the acquired
BPND values in baseline conditions and the
specific activity used for their respective microPET scans. No
significant correlation could be found (p = 0.3858). (DOCX 30 kb)PDE10A binding potential and supplier of
rats. Overview of baseline BPND
values acquired in Wistar rats supplied by Harlan and Janvier. Baseline
BPND values acquired in rats from Janvier were
significantly higher compared to baseline BPND
values acquired in rats from Harlan (Non parametric Mann-Whitney test,
p = 0.0012). (DOCX 33
kb)
Authors: S Natesan; S Ashworth; J Nielsen; S-P Tang; C Salinas; S Kealey; J B Lauridsen; T B Stensbøl; R N Gunn; E A Rabiner; S Kapur Journal: Transl Psychiatry Date: 2014-04-01 Impact factor: 6.222
Authors: Bart de Laat; Yvonne E Kling; Gwen Schroyen; Maarten Ooms; Jacob M Hooker; Guy Bormans; Koen Van Laere; Jenny Ceccarini Journal: Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging Date: 2021-06-17 Impact factor: 9.236