Neuroscience
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Altered activity of corticolimbic brain regions is a hallmark of stress-related illnesses, including mood disorders, neurodegenerative diseases, and substance abuse disorders. Acute stress adaptively recruits brain region-specific functions for coping, while sustained activation under chronic stress may overwhelm feedback mechanisms and lead to pathological cellular and behavioral responses. The neural mechanisms underlying dysregulated stress responses and how they contribute to behavioral deficits are poorly characterized. ⋯ CRS and UCMS exposure exacerbated functional activation by acute stress in anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) area 24b and ventral hippocampal (vHPC) CA1, CA3, and subiculum. In dysregulated brain regions, levels of functional activation were positively correlated with principal components reflecting variance across behavioral deficits relevant to stress-related disorders. Our data supports an association between a dysregulated stress response, altered functional corticolimbic excitation/inhibition balance, and the expression of maladaptive behaviors.
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Depression may be precipitated by the negative impact of chronic stress, which is considered to play a key role in this neuropsychiatric disorder. Interestingly, depressed patients show decreased levels of melatonin. This hormone acts pro-neurogenic and exhibits anti-depressant effects in rodent models of predictive antidepressant-like effects. ⋯ We also investigated the potential effects of melatonin and citalopram on microglial cells, hippocampal neurogenesis and peripheral cytokine profiles. Melatonin and citalopram induced similar antidepressant-like activities that occurred with some of the the following findings: (1) reversal of the morphological alterations in microglia; (2) reversal of the decreased immunoreactivity to CX3CL1 and CX3CR1 in the dentate gyrus; (3) positive regulation of cell proliferation, survival and complexity of the dendritic trees of doublecortin-cells; and (4) modifications of peripheral CX3CL1 expression. This outcome is consistent with the hypothesis about the antidepressant-like effect of melatonin and supports its relevance as a modulator of the niche in the dentate gyrus.
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Here we investigated variations of endogenous descending modulation of nociception and therapeutic effects of intramuscular (i.m.) heating-needle stimulation in early stage of Parkinson's disease (PD) induced by unilateral microinjection of 3.5 μl of 2.5 μg/μl 6-hydroxydopamine into the rat striatum. Paw withdrawal reflexes to noxious mechanical and heat stimuli in PD rats with and without exposure to i.m. 5.8% saline induced muscle nociception were evaluated. Experimental PD had no influence on mechanical or heat sensitivity in the baseline condition, whereas descending facilitation was stronger and descending inhibition was weaker in PD rats than vehicle-treated or naive rats during muscle nociception (P < 0.05). ⋯ I.m. 43 °C of heating-needle stimulation had no effects on the enhanced descending facilitation in PD rats, but it markedly increased descending inhibition and reversed the increase in the number of apomorphine-induced body rotations (P < 0.05), which effects were dose-dependently attenuated by raclopride, a dopamine 2 receptor antagonist, in the thalamic VM nucleus (P < 0.05). The results indicate that the early-stage PD is associated with enhanced descending facilitation and weakened descending inhibition. From clinical perspective, 43 °C heat therapeutic regime promises to selectively enhance descending inhibition that is accompanied by improvement of motor dysfunction in PD.
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Parkinson's disease is a disorder of adult onset involving the progressive degeneration of selective portions of the central nervous system. It is known that mitochondrial dysfunction is involved in the pathogenesis of PD. Given that PGC-1α induces proliferation of mitochondria via transcription regulation, it is possible that PGC-1α pathway dysregulation is involved in PD pathogenesis. ⋯ Expression of CoxIV, SDHA and Tomm20 also significantly decreased in the ventral midbrains of 10-month-old PGC-1α null mice. Thus, PGC-1α KO in mice induced dopaminergic neuron degeneration in the SNpc and DA deficits in the striatum in an age-dependent manner. Progressive impairment of motor coordination in an age-dependent manner was correlated to the extent of nigrostriatal dopaminergic pathway degeneration and mitochondrial dysfunction.
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Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathology is characterized by amyloid plaques containing amyloid beta (Aβ) peptides, neurofibrillary tangles containing hyperphosphorylated tau protein, and neuronal loss. In addition, Aβ deposition in brain microvessels, known as cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA), increases blood-brain barrier (BBB) permeability and induces vascular dysfunction which aggravates AD pathology. The aim of the present study was to characterize neurovascular dysfunction in the Tg-SwDI mouse model of AD. ⋯ In addition, the TJ protein occludin was decreased in Tg-SwDI mice relative to WT mice, which correlated with an increase in BBB permeability in cultured brain endothelial cells. These findings demonstrated that Tg-SwDI mice exhibit Aβ aggregation that is due, in part, to impaired Aβ clearance driven by both a decrease in P-gp and increase in RAGE protein levels in brain capillaries. Aβ aggregation promotes a decrease in the expression of the TJ protein occludin, and as consequence an increase in BBB permeability.