AI Article Synopsis

  • Scientists believe that both genes and the environment, like exposure to certain chemicals, can lead to Parkinson's disease (PD).
  • They studied a chemical called rotenone, which can harm the brain and is found in insecticides, to see how it affects mice with and without a specific gene called Nlrp3.
  • The results showed that mice with the Nlrp3 gene got worse brain damage and inflammation from rotenone, suggesting that stopping NLRP3 might help protect the brain from this toxin.

Article Abstract

Complex interactions between genetic and environmental factors are widely believed to underlie the incidence and progression of Parkinson's disease (PD). Rotenone is a naturally occurring metabolic toxin employed as an insecticide and piscicide identified as a risk factor for the development of PD in agricultural workers. The Nlrp3 inflammasome is an intracellular mediator that can initiate an inflammatory cascade in response to cellular stress. Reports by others indicating that NLRP3 expression was detectable in tissues obtained from Alzheimer's disease patients and that the PD-associated protein α-synuclein could activate inflammasomes in cultured glial cells, prompted us to test the prediction that Nlrp3 was required for the development of Parkinson's-like changes resulting from rotenone exposure in mice. We exposed wild type and Nlrp3-/- mice to chronic low doses of intragastric rotenone and conducted longitudinal behavioral and serum cytokine analysis followed by evaluation of neuroinflammatory and neurodegenerative endpoints in brain tissues. We observed progressive rotenone-dependent changes in serum cytokine levels and circulating leukocytes in wild type mice not observed in Nlrp3-/- mice. Analysis of brain tissues revealed Nlrp3-dependent neuroinflammation and nigral cell loss in mice exposed to rotenone as compared with mice exposed to vehicle alone. Together, our findings provide compelling evidence of a role for Nlrp3 in nigral degeneration and neuroinflammation resulting from systemic rotenone exposure and suggest that the suppression of NLRP3 activity may be a rational neuroprotective strategy for toxin-associated PD.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5837210PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/toxsci/kfx117DOI Listing

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