| Literature DB >> 33860208 |
Vicki Wang1, Tung-Tai Kuo2, Eagle Yi-Kung Huang3, Kuo-Hsing Ma4, Yu-Ching Chou5, Zhao-Yang Fu6, Li-Wen Lai7, Jin Jung8, Hoi-Ii Choi8, Doo-Sup Choi9, Yazhou Li10, Lars Olson11, Nigel H Greig10, Barry J Hoffer12, Yuan-Hao Chen6.
Abstract
GLP-1 agonists have become increasingly interesting as a new Parkinson's disease (PD) clinical treatment strategy. Additional preclinical studies are important to validate this approach and define the disease stage when they are most effective. We hence characterized the efficacy of PT320, a sustained release formulation of the long acting GLP-1 agonist, exenatide, in a progressive PD (MitoPark) mouse model. A clinically translatable biweekly PT320 dose was administered starting at 5 weeks of age and longitudinally evaluated to 24 weeks, and multiple behavioral/cellular parameters were measured. PT320 significantly improved spontaneous locomotor activity and rearing in MitoPark PD mice. "Motivated" behavior also improved, evaluated by accelerating rotarod performance. Behavioral improvement was correlated with enhanced cellular and molecular indices of dopamine (DA) midbrain function. Fast scan cyclic voltammetry demonstrated protection of striatal and nucleus accumbens DA release and reuptake in PT320 treated MitoPark mice. Positron emission tomography showed protection of striatal DA fibers and tyrosine hydroxylase protein expression was augmented by PT320 administration. Early PT320 treatment may hence provide an important neuroprotective therapeutic strategy in PD.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33860208 PMCID: PMC8033754 DOI: 10.1021/acsptsci.1c00013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Pharmacol Transl Sci ISSN: 2575-9108