Ana Carolina Issy, João Francisco Pedrazzi, Glauce Crivelaro Nascimento, Lúcia Helena Faccioli, Elaine Del Bel
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The 5-lipoxygenase/leukotriene system has been implicated in both physiological and pathological states within the central nervous system. Understanding how this system interacts with the dopaminergic system could provide valuable insights into dopamine-related pathologies. This study focused on examining both motor and non-motor dopamine-related responses in 5-lipoxygenase/leukotriene-deficient mice. We used pharmacological agents such as amphetamine, apomorphine, and reserpine to challenge the dopaminergic system, evaluating their effects on prepulse inhibition reaction (PPI), general motor activity, and oral involuntary movements. Additionally, we analyzed striatal glial marker expression (GFAP and Iba-1) in reserpine-treated mice. The 5-lipoxygenase/leukotriene-deficient mice exhibited increased spontaneous locomotor activity, including both horizontal and vertical exploration, along with stereotyped behavior compared to wild-type mice. This hyperactivity was reduced by acute apomorphine treatment. Although basal PPI responses were unchanged, 5-lipoxygenase/leukotriene-deficient mice displayed a significant reduction in susceptibility to amphetamine-induced PPI disruption. Conversely, these mice were more vulnerable to reserpine-induced involuntary movements. There were no significant differences in the basal expression of striatal GFAP and Iba-1 positive cells between 5-lipoxygenase/leukotriene-deficient and wild-type mice. However, reserpine treatment significantly increased GFAP immunoreactivity in wild-type mice, an effect not observed in 5-lipoxygenase-deficient mice. Additionally, the percentage of activated microglia was significantly higher in reserpine-treated wild-type mice, an effect absents in 5-lipoxygenase/leukotriene-deficient mice. Our findings suggest that 5-lipoxygenase/leukotriene deficiency leads to a distinctive dopaminergic phenotype, indicating that leukotrienes may influence the modulation of dopamine-mediated responses.
期刊介绍:
Neurotoxicity Research is an international, interdisciplinary broad-based journal for reporting both basic and clinical research on classical neurotoxicity effects and mechanisms associated with neurodegeneration, necrosis, neuronal apoptosis, nerve regeneration, neurotrophin mechanisms, and topics related to these themes.
Published papers have focused on:
NEURODEGENERATION and INJURY
Neuropathologies
Neuronal apoptosis
Neuronal necrosis
Neural death processes (anatomical, histochemical, neurochemical)
Neurodegenerative Disorders
Neural Effects of Substances of Abuse
NERVE REGENERATION and RESPONSES TO INJURY
Neural Adaptations
Neurotrophin mechanisms and actions
NEURO(CYTO)TOXICITY PROCESSES and NEUROPROTECTION
Excitatory amino acids
Neurotoxins, endogenous and synthetic
Reactive oxygen (nitrogen) species
Neuroprotection by endogenous and exogenous agents
Papers on related themes are welcome.