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Research Square Jun 2024The consumption of alcohol and caffeine affects the lives of billions of individuals worldwide. Although recent evidence indicates that caffeine impairs the reinforcing...
The consumption of alcohol and caffeine affects the lives of billions of individuals worldwide. Although recent evidence indicates that caffeine impairs the reinforcing properties of alcohol, a characterization of its effects on alcohol-stimulated mesolimbic dopamine (DA) function was lacking. Acting as the pro-drug of salsolinol, alcohol excites DA neurons in the posterior ventral tegmental area (pVTA) and increases DA release in the nucleus accumbens shell (AcbSh). Here we show that caffeine, via antagonistic activity on A2A adenosine receptors (A2AR), prevents alcohol-dependent activation of mesolimbic DA function as assessed, in-vivo, by brain microdialysis of AcbSh DA and, in-vitro, by electrophysiological recordings of pVTA DA neuronal firing. Accordingly, while the A1R antagonist DPCPX fails to prevent the effects of alcohol on DA function, both caffeine and the A2AR antagonist SCH 58261 prevent alcohol-dependent pVTA generation of salsolinol and increase in AcbSh DA in-vivo, as well as alcohol-dependent excitation of pVTA DA neurons in-vitro. However, caffeine also prevents direct salsolinol- and morphine-stimulated DA function, suggesting that it can exert these inhibitory effects also independently from affecting alcohol-induced salsolinol formation or bioavailability. Finally, untargeted metabolomics of the pVTA showcases that caffeine antagonizes alcohol-mediated effects on molecules (e.g. phosphatidylcholines, fatty amides, carnitines) involved in lipid signaling and energy metabolism, which could represent an additional salsolinol-independent mechanism of caffeine in impairing alcohol-mediated stimulation of mesolimbic DA transmission. In conclusion, the outcomes of this study strengthen the potential of caffeine, as well as of A2AR antagonists, for future development of preventive/therapeutic strategies for alcohol use disorder.
PubMed: 38946995
DOI: 10.21203/rs.3.rs-4289552/v1 -
Behavioural Brain Research Jun 2024Major depressive disorder (MDD) affects millions of people worldwide, with women at a higher risk during the childbearing age. Vortioxetine (VOX) and Vilazodone (VLZ)...
Major depressive disorder (MDD) affects millions of people worldwide, with women at a higher risk during the childbearing age. Vortioxetine (VOX) and Vilazodone (VLZ) are newer antidepressants with improved therapeutic profile commonly used, but their safety during pregnancy and long-term effects on offspring are poorly understood due to paucity of literature in preclinical and clinical studies. This study aimed to investigate whether prenatal exposure to VOX and VLZ impacts depressive- and anxiety-like neurobehavioral alterations in offspring, focusing on neurotransmitter-mediated mechanisms. Pregnant Wistar dams received either VOX or VLZ, 1mg/day and 2mg/day of the drug orally from gestation day (GD) 6 to 21. The dams naturally delivered their offspring and reared until they reached postnatal day (PND) 21. Offspring of both sexes were tested for display of depressive-and anxiety-like behaviors from PND 56 to 70. After PND 70, offspring were sacrificed, and their brains were collected to estimate neurotransmitter levels. As per protocol, controls were maintained simultaneously for each experimental design. Prenatal exposure to VOX or VLZ induced an increased state of depressive- and anxiety-like behaviors in both male and female offspring. Additionally, neurotransmitter (serotonin, dopamine, and nor-epinephrine) levels in the prefrontal cortex region of the brain were substantially reduced in exposed offspring. No sex specific neurobehavioral and neurochemical implications were observed in the present study. Our findings suggest that prenatal exposure to VOX and VLZ disrupts neurochemical balance in the fetal brain, leading to long-lasting neurobehavioral impairments in offspring of both sexes.
PubMed: 38945303
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbr.2024.115128 -
Behavioural Brain Research Jun 2024Controlled nigrostriatal dopamine release supports effective limb use during locomotion coordination that becomes compromised after this pathway deteriorates in...
Controlled nigrostriatal dopamine release supports effective limb use during locomotion coordination that becomes compromised after this pathway deteriorates in Parkinson's Disease (PD). How dopamine release relates to active ongoing behavior control remains unknown. Restoring proper release strategy appears important to successful PD treatment with transplanted dopamine-producing stem cells. This is suggested by apparently distinct behavioral support from tonic or phasic release and corresponding requirements of requisite afferent control exhibited by intact nigrostriatal neurons. Our laboratory previously demonstrated that transplanted dopaminergic cells can elicit skilled movement recovery known to depend on phasic dopamine release. However, efforts to measure this movement-related dopamine release yielded seemingly paradoxical, incongruent results. In response, here we explored whether those previous observations derived from rapid reuptake transport into either transplanted cells or residual, lesion-surviving terminals. We confirmed this using minimal reuptake blockade during intrastriatal microdialysis. After unilateral dopamine depletion, rats received transplants and were subjected to our swimming protocol. Among dopamine-depleted and transplanted rats, treatment supported restoration of limb movement symmetry. Interestingly, subsequent reuptake-restricted microdialysis confirmed distinct swimming-induced dopamine increases clearly occurred among these lesioned/transplanted subjects. Thus, phasic firing control appears to contribute to transplant-derived recovery in Parkinsonian animals.
PubMed: 38945302
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbr.2024.115121 -
European Journal of Pharmacology Jun 2024Bitter taste receptors (TAS2Rs) and their downstream signaling pathways are expressed not only in the oral tissues but also in extraoral tissues. Emerging data has...
AIMS
Bitter taste receptors (TAS2Rs) and their downstream signaling pathways are expressed not only in the oral tissues but also in extraoral tissues. Emerging data has demonstrated the beneficial effect of ghrelin in neurodegenerative diseases. Gaining more insight into the interaction between TAS2Rs and gut hormones may expand their therapeutic applications. Herein, we aimed to assess the possible effect of TAS2R activation by denatonium benzoate (DB) in modulating functional and neurobiochemical alterations in a model of Parkinson's disease (PD).
MAIN METHODS
PD model was induced by daily injection of rotenone (2 mg/kg). Rats received DB (5 mg/kg), atenolol (10 mg/kg), or both concomitantly with rotenone, daily for 28 days. Evaluation of the motor abnormalities and histological examination of brain tissues were conducted. In addition, striatal dopamine contents, immunohistochemical expression of tyrosine hydroxylase, plasma ghrelin level, and biochemical analysis of markers of inflammation and oxidative stress were assessed.
KEY FINDINGS
Treatment with DB increased serum levels of ghrelin and striatal dopamine contents with consequent amelioration of oxidative stress and attenuation of inflammatory cytokines. Moreover, DB treatment significantly ameliorated motor disturbance and histological abnormalities compared to untreated rats. Atenolol inhibited ghrelin release and abolished the positive effect of DB suggesting the involvement of ghrelin on such effects.
SIGNIFICANCE
The current study suggests that TAS2Rs agonists are promising candidates for ameliorating rotenone-induced PD pathology in rats, an action that could be linked to the enhancement of ghrelin release with consequent antioxidant and anti-inflammatory activities.
PubMed: 38945288
DOI: 10.1016/j.ejphar.2024.176802 -
Experimental Neurology Jun 2024Alleviation of motor impairment by aerobic exercise (AE) in Parkinson's disease (PD) patients points to activation of neurobiological mechanisms that may be targetable...
Moderate intensity aerobic exercise alleviates motor deficits in 6-OHDA lesioned rats and reduces serum levels of biomarkers of Parkinson's disease severity without recovery of striatal dopamine or tyrosine hydroxylase.
Alleviation of motor impairment by aerobic exercise (AE) in Parkinson's disease (PD) patients points to activation of neurobiological mechanisms that may be targetable by therapeutic approaches. However, evidence for AE-related recovery of striatal dopamine (DA) signaling or tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) loss has been inconsistent in rodent studies. This ambiguity may be related to the timing of AE intervention in relation to the status of nigrostriatal neuron loss. Here, we replicated human PD at diagnosis by establishing motor impairment with >80% striatal DA and TH loss prior to initiating AE, and assessed its potential to alleviate motor decline and restore DA and TH loss. We also evaluated if serum levels of neurofilament light (NfL) and glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), biomarkers of human PD severity, changed in response to AE. 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) was infused unilaterally into rat medial forebrain bundle to induce progressive nigrostriatal neuron loss over 28 days. Moderate intensity AE (3× per week, 40 min/session), began 8-10 days post-lesion following establishment of impaired forelimb use. Striatal tissue DA, TH protein and mRNA, and serum levels of NfL/GFAP were determined 3-wks after AE began. Despite severe striatal DA depletion at AE initiation, forelimb use deficits and hypokinesia onset were alleviated by AE, without recovery of striatal DA or TH protein loss, but reduced NfL and GFAP serum levels. This proof-of-concept study shows AE alleviates motor impairment when initiated with >80% striatal DA loss without obligate recovery of striatal DA or TH protein. Moreover, the AE-related reduction of NfL and GFAP serum levels may serve as objective blood-based biomarkers of AE efficacy.
PubMed: 38944332
DOI: 10.1016/j.expneurol.2024.114875 -
European Journal of Pharmacology Jun 2024Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and alcohol use disorder (AUD) are prevalently co-occurring, important risk factors for a broad array of neuropsychiatric diseases....
Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and alcohol use disorder (AUD) are prevalently co-occurring, important risk factors for a broad array of neuropsychiatric diseases. To date, how these two contrastive concomitant pairs increase the risk of neuropsychiatric states, notably exacerbating PTSD-related symptoms, remains unknown. Moreover, pharmacological interventions with agents that could reverse PTSD-AUD comorbidity, however, remained limited. Hence, we investigated the neuroprotective actions of naringin in mice comorbidly exposed to PTSD followed by repeated ethanol (EtOH)-induced AUD. Following a 7-day single-prolong-stress (SPS)-induced PTSD in mice, binge/heavy drinking, notably related to AUD was induced in the PTSD mice with every-other-day ethanol (2 g/kg, p.o.) administration, followed by daily treatments with naringin (25 and 50 mg/kg) or fluoxetine (10 mg/kg), from days 8-21. PTSD-AUD-related behavioral changes, alcohol preference, hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA)-axis dysfunction-induced neurochemical alterations, oxidative/nitrergic stress, and inflammation were examined in the prefrontal-cortex, striatum, and hippocampus. PTSD-AUD mice showed aggravated anxiety, spatial-cognitive, social impairments and EtOH intake, which were abated by naringin, similar to fluoxetine. Our assays on the HPA-axis showed exacerbated increased corticosterone release and adrenal hypertrophy, accompanied by marked dopamine and serotonin increase, with depleted glutamic acid decarboxylase enzyme in the three brain regions, which naringin, however, reversed, respectively. PTSD-AUD mice also showed increased TNF-α, IL-6, malondialdehyde and nitrite levels, with decreased antioxidant elements in the prefrontal-cortex, striatum, and hippocampus compared to SPS-EtOH-mice; mainly exacerbating catalase and glutathione decrease in the hippocampus relative SPS-mice. These findings suggest that AUD exacerbates PTSD pathologies in different brain regions, notably comprising neurochemical dysregulations, oxidative/nitrergic and cytokine-mediated inflammation, with HPA dysfunction, which were, however, revocable by naringin.
PubMed: 38944175
DOI: 10.1016/j.ejphar.2024.176791 -
Clinical Neurology and Neurosurgery Jun 2024Parkinson's disease (PD) is the second most prevalent neurodegenerative condition after Alzheimer's disease and it represents one of the fastest emerging neurological... (Review)
Review
Parkinson's disease (PD) is the second most prevalent neurodegenerative condition after Alzheimer's disease and it represents one of the fastest emerging neurological diseases worldwide. PD is usually diagnosed after the third decade of life with symptoms like tremors at rest and muscle stiffness. Rapid Eye Movement sleep behavioral disorder (RBD) is another disorder that is caused by a loss of typical muscle relaxation during sleep with a lot of motor activity. Usually, RBD is strongly associated with PD. Recent studies have demonstrated that PD reduces the life expectancy of patients to 10 and 20 years after being diagnosed. In addition, delayed diagnosis and treatment of these neurological disorders have significant socio-economic impacts on patients, their partners and on the general public. Often, it is not clear about PD associated financial burdens both in low and high-income countries. On the other hand, PD triggers neurological variations that affect differences in the dopamine transporter (DAT) and in glucose metabolism. Therefore, positron emission tomography (PET) using specific DAT radiotracers and fluorine-18 labeled desoxyglucose (FDG) has being considered a key imaging technique that could be applied clinically for the very early diagnosis of RBD and in PD. However, a few myths about PET is that it is very expensive. Here, we looked at the cost of treatment of PD and RBD in relation to early PET imaging. Our finding suggests that PET imaging might also be a cost sparing diagnostic option in the management of patients with PD and RBD, not only for first world countries as it is the case now but also for the third world countries. Therefore, PET is a cost-effective imaging technique for very early diagnostic of RBD and PD.
PubMed: 38944021
DOI: 10.1016/j.clineuro.2024.108404 -
ACS Sensors Jun 2024Allergy is a prevalent disease, and the potential allergic population is expanding with industrialization and changes in people's living standards. Serum immunoglobulin...
Allergy is a prevalent disease, and the potential allergic population is expanding with industrialization and changes in people's living standards. Serum immunoglobulin E (IgE) level is one of the critical indicators for determining allergy. Here, we proposed a simple, real-time monitoring, low chip cost, label-free aptamer biosensing strategy based on weak value amplification (WVA) for the quantitative detection of IgE in serum samples, enabling early and accurate diagnosis of allergic or hypersensitive patients. The aptasensor combined an imaging weak measurement system with the high specificity of the aptamer for the marker IgE. By modifying the amino group at the 3-terminal end, the anti-IgE aptamers can attach to a dopamine-modified prism's surface and selectively recognize IgE in human serum. In the presence of IgE, a specific binding reaction occurred, resulting in a change in the refractive index of the reactive region's surface, manifested as a change in the light intensity of the camera acquired experimental images. As the concentration of IgE increased, the relative light intensity advanced sequentially. The WVA-aptasensing strategy achieved a wide detection range of 0.01 ng/mL to 2 μg/mL in phosphate buffered saline buffer, with the resolution as low as 4.3 pg/mL. IgE testing experiments in human serum have proved the feasibility of our methods in detecting complex samples. In addition, the method specifically recognized IgE without interference from other proteins. We believe that our proposed sensing strategy opens up new possibilities for ultrahigh sensitivity screening of IgE and can be expanded to detecting other biomolecules.
PubMed: 38943618
DOI: 10.1021/acssensors.4c00688 -
Journal of Neurochemistry Jun 2024The synucleinopathies Parkinson disease (PD), multiple system atrophy (MSA), and the Lewy body form of pure autonomic failure (PAF) entail intra-cytoplasmic deposition...
The synucleinopathies Parkinson disease (PD), multiple system atrophy (MSA), and the Lewy body form of pure autonomic failure (PAF) entail intra-cytoplasmic deposition of the protein alpha-synuclein and pathogenic catecholaminergic neurodegeneration. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) levels of catecholamines and their metabolites are thought to provide a "neurochemical window" on central catecholaminergic innervation and can identify specific intra-neuronal dysfunctions in synucleinopathies. We asked whether there are CSF concentration gradients for catechols such as 3,4-dihydroxyphenylacetic acid (DOPAC), the main neuronal metabolite of dopamine, and if so whether the gradients influence neurochemical differences among synucleinopathies. In a retrospective cohort study, we reviewed data about concentrations of catechols in the first, sixth, and twelfth 1-mL aliquots from 33 PD, 28 MSA, and 15 PAF patients and 41 controls. There were concentration gradients for DOPAC, dopamine, norepinephrine, and 3,4-dihydroxyphenylglycol (the main neuronal metabolite of norepinephrine) and gradients in the opposite direction for 5-S-cysteinyldopa and 5-S-cysteinyldopamine. In all 3 aliquots, CSF DOPAC was low in PD and MSA compared with controls (p < 0.0001 each) and normal in PAF. Synucleinopathies differ in CSF catechols regardless of concentration gradients. Concentration gradients for 5-S-cysteinyl derivatives in opposite directions from the parent catechols may provide biomarkers of spontaneous oxidation in the CSF space.
PubMed: 38943336
DOI: 10.1111/jnc.16168 -
Biological Psychiatry Jun 2024Striatal hyperdopaminergia is implicated in the pathoetiology of schizophrenia, but how this relates to dopaminergic midbrain activity is unclear. Neuromelanin-sensitive...
BACKGROUND
Striatal hyperdopaminergia is implicated in the pathoetiology of schizophrenia, but how this relates to dopaminergic midbrain activity is unclear. Neuromelanin-sensitive MRI (NM-MRI) provides a marker of long-term dopamine function. We examined if midbrain NM-MRI contrast-to-noise ratio (NM-CNR) was higher in people with schizophrenia relative to controls and if this correlated with dopamine synthesis capacity.
METHODS
N=154 participants (n=74 individuals with schizophrenia and n=80 healthy controls) underwent NM-MRI of the substantia nigra and ventral tegmental area (SN-VTA). A subset of the schizophrenia group (n=38) also received [18F]-DOPA PET to measure dopamine synthesis capacity (K) in the SN-VTA and striatum.
RESULTS
SN-VTA NM-CNR was significantly higher in patients with schizophrenia relative to controls (effect size=0.38, p=0.019). This effect was greatest for voxels in the medial and ventral SN-VTA. In patients, SN-VTA K positively correlated with SN-VTA NM-CNR (r=0.44, p=0.005) and striatal K (r=0.71, p<0.001). Voxelwise analysis demonstrated that SN-VTA NM-CNR was positively associated with striatal K (r=0.53, p=0.005) and that this relationship appeared strongest between the ventral SN-VTA and associative striatum in schizophrenia.
CONCLUSIONS
Our results suggest that neuromelanin levels are higher in patients with schizophrenia relative to controls, particularly in midbrain regions that project to parts of the striatum which receive innervation from the limbic and association cortices. The direct relationship between measures of neuromelanin and dopamine synthesis suggests that these aspects of schizophrenia pathophysiology are linked. Our findings highlight specific mesostriatal circuits as the loci of dopamine dysfunction in schizophrenia and, thus, potential therapeutic targets.
PubMed: 38942349
DOI: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2024.06.013