AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how increased glutamate activity at NMDA receptors might contribute to Parkinson's disease using a rat model.
  • It involved measuring the stepping behavior of rats after administering drugs like L-dopa and NMDA receptor antagonists.
  • Results showed that while L-dopa and NMDA antagonists improved stepping, they didn't completely fix movement deficits, suggesting that too much glutamate may worsen Parkinson's symptoms.

Article Abstract

Rationale And Objectives: To test the hypothesis that excess glutamatergic transmission at NMDA receptors may contribute to the pathogenesis of Parkinson's disease (PD), we examined the effects of various NMDA receptor antagonists on a recently developed rat model of PD.

Methods: Following unilateral injections of 12 microg 6-OHDA into the medial forebrain bundle of male Long Evans rats, stepping with both front paws was measured separately as the paws were dragged backwards and laterally. The effects of i.p. injections of varying doses of L-dopa, the non-competitive NMDA receptor antagonist dizocilpine [(+)-MK-801], the competitive NMDA receptor antagonist CPP, and combinations of L-dopa and NMDA receptor antagonists were then examined on stepping in three separate groups of rats.

Results: The lesioned rats stepped less often with their contralateral paw than with their ipsilateral paw, and the magnitude of this stepping deficit was positively correlated with the amount of DA depletion in the ipsilateral dorsal striatum. L-dopa (1-25 mg/kg) dose dependently enhanced stepping with the contralateral paw, and 0.15-0.3 mg/kg dizocilpine and 1.5-6.25 mg/kg CPP enhanced stepping with the contralateral paw as much as did 8 mg/kg L-dopa. The combinations of L-dopa and each of the NMDA receptor antagonists did not significantly improve stepping more than either drug alone. Moreover, none of the drugs completely eliminated the stepping deficits, and high doses began to impair stepping with the ipsilateral paw by inducing turning.

Conclusions: These data indicate that deficits in contralateral stepping are a reliable and sensitive measure of akinesia in unilateral 6-OHDA-lesioned rats, and they support the hypothesis that excess glutamatergic transmission at NMDA receptors may play a role in the expression of PD symptomology.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00213-004-1799-5DOI Listing

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