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J Neural Transm Suppl 1999;55:71-7

Neuroprotective effect of chronic inactivation of the subthalamic nucleus in
a rat model of Parkinson's disease.

Piallat B, Benazzouz A, Benabid AL
Laboratoire de Neurobiologie Preclinique, INSERM U.318, CHU, Grenoble,
France.

Several evidences showed that glutamate can be implicated in the
degenerative process of dopaminergic neurons in Parkinson's disease. The
treatment with NMDA antagonists have been shown to induce a neuroprotective
effect in animal models of this disease. As subthalamic nucleus neurons send
direct glutamatergic projections to the substantia nigra, we studied the
effects of kainic acid lesion of this nucleus on the degeneration of
dopaminergic neurons induced by microinjection of 6-hydroxydopamine in the
striatum of rat done one week after the first lesion. Animals were killed 15
days after the injection of 6-hydroxydopamine. Immunohistochemical study
showed that lesion of the subthalamic nucleus can prevent the degeneration
of substantia nigra dopaminergic somata when carried out one week prior to
6-hydroxydopamine injection in the striatum. Nevertheless neurochemical
results showed that this lesion did not antagonize the striatal
6-hydroxydopamine-induced dopamine depletion in the striatum 15 days after
6-hydroxydopamine injection.

PMID: 10335494, UI: 99267975
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