Literature DB >> 9132989

Striatal and cortical NMDA receptors are altered by a neurotoxic regimen of methamphetamine.

A J Eisch1, S J O'Dell, J F Marshall.   

Abstract

Methamphetamine (m-AMPH) treatment produces long-lasting damage to striatal and cortical monoaminergic terminals and may also injure nonmonoaminergic cortical neurons. Evidence suggests that both dopamine (DA) and glutamate (GLU) play crucial roles in producing this damage. We used quantitative autoradiography to examine [3H]mazindol ([3H]MAZ) binding to striatal DA transporters and [3H]GLU binding to N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors in the striatum and cortex 1 week and 1 month after a neurotoxic regimen of m-AMPH. Rats received m-AMPH (4 mg/kg) or saline (SAL) (1 ml/kg) in four s.c. injections separated by 2 h intervals. One week after m-AMPH, the ventral and lateral sectors of the striatum showed the greatest decreases in both [3H]MAZ and [3H]GLU binding, while the nucleus accumbens (NA) showed no significant decreases. One month after m-AMPH, striatal [3H]MAZ binding was still significantly decreased, while NMDA receptor binding had recovered. Surprisingly, the parietal cortex showed a m-AMPH-induced increase in NMDA receptor binding in layers II/III and IV 1 week after m-AMPH and only in layers II/III 1 month after m-AMPH. The prefrontal cortex showed no m-AMPH-induced changes in NMDA receptor binding at either time point. This is the first demonstration that a regimen of m-AMPH that results in long-lasting damage to DA terminals can alter forebrain NMDA receptor binding. Thus, repeated m-AMPH treatments may produce changes in glutamatergic transmission in selected striatal and cortical regions.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 9132989     DOI: 10.1002/(SICI)1098-2396(199603)22:3<217::AID-SYN3>3.0.CO;2-F

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Synapse        ISSN: 0887-4476            Impact factor:   2.562


  21 in total

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5.  Functional interactions of HIV-infection and methamphetamine dependence during motor programming.

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9.  Effects of a single postnatal methamphetamine administration on NMDA-induced seizures are sex- and prenatal exposure-specific.

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10.  Increases in cytoplasmic dopamine compromise the normal resistance of the nucleus accumbens to methamphetamine neurotoxicity.

Authors:  David M Thomas; Dina M Francescutti-Verbeem; Donald M Kuhn
Journal:  J Neurochem       Date:  2009-04-28       Impact factor: 5.372

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