| Literature DB >> 31928877 |
Jun Young Heo1, Min-Ho Nam2, Hyung Ho Yoon3, Jeongyeon Kim4, Yu Jin Hwang5, Woojin Won6, Dong Ho Woo7, Ji Ae Lee8, Hyun-Jung Park9, Seonmi Jo10, Min Joung Lee11, Sunpil Kim6, Jeong-Eun Shim12, Dong-Pyo Jang12, Kyoung I Kim13, Sue H Huh13, Jae Y Jeong13, Neil W Kowall14, Junghee Lee14, Hyeonjoo Im15, Jong Hyun Park16, Bo Ko Jang16, Ki Duk Park16, Hyunjoo J Lee17, Hyogeun Shin17, Il-Joo Cho17, Eun Mi Hwang18, YoungSoo Kim19, Hye Yun Kim20, Soo-Jin Oh21, Seung Eun Lee22, Sun Ha Paek23, Jong Hyuk Yoon24, Byung K Jin13, Gi Ryang Kweon11, Insop Shim9, Onyou Hwang8, Hoon Ryu25, Sang Ryong Jeon26, C Justin Lee27.
Abstract
Current pharmacological treatments for Parkinson's disease (PD) are focused on symptomatic relief, but not on disease modification, based on the strong belief that PD is caused by irreversible dopaminergic neuronal death. Thus, the concept of the presence of dormant dopaminergic neurons and its possibility as the disease-modifying therapeutic target against PD have not been explored. Here we show that optogenetic activation of substantia nigra pars compacta (SNpc) neurons alleviates parkinsonism in acute PD animal models by recovering tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) from the TH-negative dormant dopaminergic neurons, some of which still express DOPA decarboxylase (DDC). The TH loss depends on reduced dopaminergic neuronal firing under aberrant tonic inhibition, which is attributed to excessive astrocytic GABA. Blocking the astrocytic GABA synthesis recapitulates the therapeutic effect of optogenetic activation. Consistently, SNpc of postmortem PD patients shows a significant population of TH-negative/DDC-positive dormant neurons surrounded by numerous GABA-positive astrocytes. We propose that disinhibiting dormant dopaminergic neurons by blocking excessive astrocytic GABA could be an effective therapeutic strategy against PD.Entities:
Keywords: DOPA decarboxylase; GABA; MAO-B; Parkinson’s disease; astrocytes; substantia nigra pars compacta; tonic inhibition; tyrosine hydroxylase
Year: 2020 PMID: 31928877 DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2019.11.079
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Biol ISSN: 0960-9822 Impact factor: 10.834