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Submitted on June 3, 2002
From Clinica Neurologica, Dipartimento di Neuroscienze, Università "Tor Vergata," and IRCCS Fondazione Santa Lucia, Rome, Italy (E.S., D.C., G.B., P.C.); and Instituto Cajal, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, Madrid, Spain (A.B.M., R.M.). * To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: calabre{at}uniroma2.it.
Background and PurposeSeveral observations indicate that, during energy deprivation, endogenous dopamine may become neurotoxic. Accordingly, the nucleus striatum is a preferential site of silent infarcts in humans, and experimental ischemia caused by homolateral carotid occlusion selectively damages this dopamine-enriched brain area. In an attempt to clarify how dopamine takes part in ischemia-induced neuronal damage, we performed in vitro electrophysiological recordings from neurons of the nucleus striatum. MethodsIntracellular recordings with sharp microelectrodes were performed from corticostriatal slices. Slices were obtained from both rats and wild-type and dopamine D1 receptor-lacking mice. In some experiments, the striatum was unilaterally denervated by injecting the dopamine-specific neurotoxin 6-hydroxydopamine in the homolateral substantia nigra. Dopamine agonists and antagonists, as well as drugs targeting the intracellular cascade coupled to dopamine receptor stimulation, were applied at known concentrations. ResultsManipulation of the dopamine system failed to affect the membrane depolarization of striatal neurons exposed to combined oxygen and glucose deprivation of short duration, but it reduced the amplitude of postischemic long-term potentiation (LTP) expressed at corticostriatal synapses. In particular, pharmacological blockade or genetic inactivation of D1/cAMP/protein kinase A pathway prevented the long-term increase of the excitatory postsynaptic potential (EPSP) amplitude caused by a transient ischemic episode, while it failed to prevent the increase of the EPSP half-decay coupled to ischemic LTP. ConclusionsThe present data suggest that endogenous dopamine, via D1 receptors, selectively facilitates the expression of ischemic LTP on the AMPA-mediated component of the EPSPs, while it does not alter the expression of this form of synaptic plasticity on the N-methyl-D-aspartate-mediated component of corticostriatal synaptic potentials. Understanding the cellular and molecular mechanisms of ischemia-triggered excitotoxicity offers hope for the development of specific treatments able to interfere with this pathological process.
Accepted on July 3, 2002
Endogenous Dopamine Amplifies Ischemic Long-Term Potentiation via D1 Receptors
Emilia Saulle MD;
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