慢性甲基苯丙胺会增加幼年小鼠纹状体和海马中的α-突触核蛋白蛋白水平,但不会增加皮质中的α-突触核蛋白蛋白水平。

Journal of addiction & prevention Pub Date : 2014-01-01
B Butler, J Gamble-George, P Prins, A North, J T Clarke, H Khoshbouei
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引用次数: 0

摘要

甲基苯丙胺是全球使用第二广泛的非法药物。仅 2005 年一年就合成了 290 多吨甲基苯丙胺,相当于约 30 亿 100 毫克剂量的甲基苯丙胺。吸毒者滥用高浓度甲基苯丙胺的时间长达数月甚至数年。目前的文献报道一致认为,甲基苯丙胺引起的神经元损伤可能使甲基苯丙胺使用者更容易出现神经退行性病变。具体来说,长期接触精神兴奋剂与纹状体α-突触核蛋白表达的增加有关,这种突触蛋白与神经退行性疾病的发病机制有关。这就提出了甲基苯丙胺暴露是否会影响大脑中α-突触核蛋白水平的问题。在这篇简短的报告中,我们研究了青春期雄性小鼠在接受甲基苯丙胺(24 毫克/千克/天/14 天)神经毒性治疗后,纹状体、海马和皮层中的α-突触核蛋白蛋白和 mRNA 水平。我们发现,甲基苯丙胺暴露会导致纹状体和海马中α-突触核蛋白单体形式(分子种类为 19 kDa)的减少,但皮质中的α-突触核蛋白单体形式并没有减少。尽管高分子量α-突触核蛋白(>19 kDa)升高,但暴露于甲基苯丙胺的小鼠纹状体、海马和大脑皮层中的α-突触核蛋白 mRNA 水平没有变化。甲基苯丙胺诱导的高分子量α-突触核蛋白蛋白水平的增加可能是甲基苯丙胺介导的神经毒性的因果机制或代偿后果之一。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Chronic Methamphetamine Increases Alpha-Synuclein Protein Levels in the Striatum and Hippocampus but not in the Cortex of Juvenile Mice.

Chronic Methamphetamine Increases Alpha-Synuclein Protein Levels in the Striatum and Hippocampus but not in the Cortex of Juvenile Mice.

Methamphetamine is the second most widely used illicit drug worldwide. More than 290 tons of methamphetamine was synthesized in the year 2005 alone, corresponding to approximately ~3 billion 100 mg doses of methamphetamine. Drug addicts abuse high concentrations of methamphetamine for months and even years. Current reports in the literature are consistent with the interpretation that methamphetamine-induced neuronal injury may render methamphetamine users more susceptible to neurodegenerative pathologies. Specifically, chronic exposure to psychostimulants is associated with increases in striatal alpha-synuclein expression, a synaptic protein implicated in the pathogenesis of neurodegenerative diseases. This raises the question whether methamphetamine exposure affects alpha-synuclein levels in the brain. In this short report, we examined alpha-synuclein protein and mRNA levels in the striatum, hippocampus and cortex of adolescent male mice following a neurotoxic regimen of methamphetamine (24mg/kg/daily/14days). We found that methamphetamine exposure resulted in a decrease in the monomeric form of alpha-synuclein (molecular species <19 kDa), while increasing higher molecular weight alpha-synuclein species (>19 kDa) in the striatum and hippocampus, but not in the cortex. Despite the elevation of high molecular weight alpha-synuclein species (>19 kDa), there was no change in the alpha-synuclein mRNA levels in the striatum, hippocampus and cortex of mice exposed to methamphetamine. The methamphetamine-induced increase in high molecular weight alpha-synuclein protein levels might be one of the causal mechanisms or one of the compensatory consequences of methamphetamine-mediated neurotoxicity.

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