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FROM: BioMed Central - BMC Biology
http://www.biomedcentral.com/1741-7007/2/22/abstract

Research article
  Low dose pramipexole is neuroprotective in the MPTP mouse model of
Parkinson's disease, and downregulates the dopamine transporter via the
D3receptor
Jeffrey N. Joyce , Cheryl Woolsey , Han Ryoo , Sabine Borwege  and Diane
Hagner

BMC Biology 2004, 2:22     doi:10.1186/1741-7007-2-22

Published   11 October 2004

Abstract (provisional)


Background

Our aim was to determine if pramipexole, a D3 preferring agonist,
effectively reduced dopamine neuron and fiber loss in the
1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP) mouse model when
given at intraperitoneal doses corresponding to clinical doses. We also
determined whether subchronic treatment with pramipexole regulates
dopamine transporter function, thereby reducing intracellular transport
of the active metabolite of MPTP, 1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium (MPP+).

Methods

Ten 12-month old C57BL/6 mice were treated with MPTP (or saline) twice
per day at 20mg/kg s.c. (4 injections over 48 h). Mice were pretreated
for 3 days and during the 2-day MPTP regimen with pramipexole (0.1
mg/kg/day) or saline. Stereological quantification of dopamine neuron
number and optical density measurement of dopamine fiber loss were
carried out at 1 week after treatment, using immunostaining for dopamine
transporter (DAT) and tyrosine hydroxylase (TH). Additional wild-type
(WT) and D3 receptor knockout (KO) mice were treated for 5 days with
pramipexole (0.1 mg/kg/day) or vehicle. The kinetics of [3H]MPP+ and
[3H]DA uptake (Vmax and Km) were determined 24 h later; and at 24 h and
14 days dopamine transporter density was measured by quantitative
autoradiography.

Results

Pramipexole treatment completely antagonized the neurotoxic effects of
MPTP, as measured by substantia nigra and ventral tegmental area
TH-immunoreactive cell counts. MPTP- induced loss of striatal
innervation, as measured by DAT-immunoreactivity, was partially prevented
by pramipexole, but not with regard to TH-IR. Pramipexole also reduced
DAT- immunoreactivity in non-MPTP treated mice. Subchronic treatment with
pramipexole lowered the Vmax for [3H]DA and [3H]MPP+ uptake into striatal
synaptosomes of WT mice. Pramipexole treatment lowered Vmax in WT but not
D3 KO mice; however, D3 KO mice had lower Vmax for [3H]DA uptake. There
was no change in DAT number in WT with pramipexole treatment or D3 KO
mice at 24 h post-treatment, but there was a reduction in WT-pramipexole
treated and not in D3 KO mice at 14 days post-treatment.

Conclusions

These results suggest that protection occurs at clinically suitable doses
of pramipexole. Protection could be due to a reduced amount of MPP+ taken
up into DA terminals via DAT. D3 receptor plays an important role in this
regulation of transporter uptake and availability.

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