| Literature DB >> 29809058 |
Xian-Si Zeng1, Wen-Shuo Geng1, Jin-Jing Jia1.
Abstract
Parkinson disease (PD) is the second most common neurodegenerative movement disorder. Pharmacological animal models are invaluable tools to study the pathological mechanisms of PD. Currently, invertebrate and vertebrate animal models have been developed by using several main neurotoxins, such as 6-hydroxydopamine, 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine, paraquat, and rotenone. These models achieve to some extent to reproduce the key features of PD, including motor defects, progressive loss of dopaminergic neurons in substantia nigra pars compacta, and the formation of Lewy bodies. In this review, we will highlight the pathogenic mechanisms of those neurotoxins and summarize different neurotoxic animal models with the hope to help researchers choose among them accurately and to promote the development of modeling PD.Entities:
Keywords: Parkinson disease; animal models; assessment; neurotoxins; pathogenic mechanism
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29809058 PMCID: PMC5977437 DOI: 10.1177/1759091418777438
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ASN Neuro ISSN: 1759-0914 Impact factor: 4.146
Figure 1.Structures of dopamine and main neurotoxins used to reproduce features of PD in animal models.
6-OHDA = 6-hydroxydopamine; MPTP = 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine; MPP+ = 1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium ion.
Figure 2.The administration routes and lesion mechanisms of dopaminergic neurotoxins. 6-OHDA must be delivered via intracerebral injection into SNc or striatum, where it is transported into dopaminergic neurons by DAT. MPTP, rotenone, and paraquat are systemically administrated because they can cross the BBB. MPTP is metabolized by MAO-B in glial cells to MPP+, which is also transported into dopaminergic neurons by DAT. Rotenone directly enters the dopaminergic neurons due to its hydrophobicity. 6-OHDA, MPP+, and rotenone inhibit the activity of complex I and further result in dopaminergic neurodegeneration. Neutral amino acid transporter mediates the Na+-dependent entry of paraquat into dopaminergic neurons, where it impairs the redox recycling and induces oxidative stress, ultimately leads to the neuronal death.
6-OHDA = 6-hydroxydopamine; MPTP = 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine; MPP+ = 1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium ion.
The Administration Routes of Neurotoxins and the Parkinsonisms in Rodents.
| Neurotoxins | Doses | Species | Routes | Pathology | Motor behavior | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6-OHDA | 0.032 mg/kg | Rat or mouse | i.c. into SNc | ↓dopaminergic neurons in SNc,↓striatal DA | Impaired: postural asymmetry | ( |
| 0.05 mg/kg | Rat | i.c. into MFB | ↓TH-positive cells in the striatum or SNc | IMPAIRED: rigidity | ( | |
| 0.02–0.16 mg/kg | Mouse | i.c. into MFB | ↓TH-positive cells/fiber in the striatum or SNc | Impaired | ( | |
| 0.05–0.32 mg/kg | Rat or mouse | i.c. into striatum | ↓striatal TH and DA,↓dopaminergic neurons within SNc, ↓TH fiber in motor cortex | Impaired | ( | |
| MPTP | 33 nmol/24 hr | Rat | MPP+: i.c. into SNc/striatum | ↓DA in SNc /↓dopaminergic neurons in SNc,↓striatal DA | Impaired: postural asymmetry and motor reduction | ( |
| 15–20 mg/kg | Mouse | i.p. | ↓dopaminergic neurons in SNc, ↓striatal DA and TH fiber, no LB | Impaired: hypokinesia | ( | |
| 46 mg/kg | Mouse | i.p. infusion | ↓dopaminergic neurons in SNc, ↓striatal TH fiber, ↑LB | Impaired: hypokinesia | ( | |
| 23 mg/kg | Mouse | s.c. | no changes | Impaired: hypokinesia | ( | |
| Paraquat | 10 mg/kg | Mouse | oral | ↓TH-positive cells and mRNA level of DAT in SNc,↓striatal DA | Impaired | ( |
| 10–15 mg/kg | Rat or mouse | i.p. | ↓TH-positive cells and ↑α-synuclein in SNc,↓striatal dopaminergic nerve fibers, ↓striatal DA(contentious) | Impaired | ( | |
| Rotenone | 2–3 mg/kg | Rat | s.c. infusion | ↓dopaminergic neurons, ↑α-synuclein in SNc, peripheral toxicity | impaired: hypokinesia and rigidity | ( |
| 5.0 μg | Rat | i.c. | ↓dopaminergic neurons, ↑α-synuclein in SNc, no peripheral toxicity | Not determined | ( | |
| 2.75–3.0 mg/kg | Rat | i.p. | ↓dopaminergic neurons, ↑aggregation of α-synuclein in SNc | Impaired: postural instability, rigidity, bradykinesia | ( | |
| 50 mg/kg | Mouse | oral | ↓TH-positive cells in SNc, ↑mitochondrial apoptosis | Not determined | ( |
Note. DA = dopamine; DAT = dopamine transporter; i.c. = intracerebral; i.p. = intraperitoneal; LB = Lewy body; MFB = medial forebrain bundle; s.c. = subcutaneous; TH = tyrosine hydroxylase.
MPTP-Induced Parkinsonism in Nonhuman Primates.
| Species | Doses | Routes | Pathology | Motor behavior | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Common marmosets | 2 mg/kg | s.c. | Not determined | Impaired: reduction in basal locomotor activity, poor coordination of movement, abnormal and rigid posture, reduced alertness, and head-checking movements | ( |
| Cynomolgus monkeys | 0.4 mg/kg | i.v. | ↓TH-positive dopaminergic neurons in SNc | Impaired: tremor, bradykinesia, and impaired balance | ( |
| Rhesus monkeys | 0.2 mg/kg | not shown | ↓tyrosine hydroxylase-positive neurons in SNc | Impaired: posture and resting tremor, rigidity, bradykinesia, and gesture instability | ( |
| Squirrel monkeys | 1.75 mg/kg | s.c. | ↓TH-positive dopaminergic neurons in SNc, ↑α-synuclein | Impaired | ( |
Note. i.v. = intravenously; s.c. = subcutaneous; TH = tyrosine hydroxylase.