Peterson_2012_Neurobiol.Dis_45_409

Reference

Title : Adenosine A2a receptor antagonists attenuate striatal adaptations following dopamine depletion - Peterson_2012_Neurobiol.Dis_45_409
Author(s) : Peterson JD , Goldberg JA , Surmeier DJ
Ref : Neurobiol Dis , 45 :409 , 2012
Abstract :

The motor symptoms of Parkinson's disease (PD) are widely thought to arise from an imbalance in the activity of the two major striatal efferent pathways following the loss of dopamine (DA) signaling. In striatopallidal, indirect pathway spiny projection neurons (iSPNs), intrinsic excitability rises following the loss of inhibitory D2 receptor signaling. Because these receptors are normally counterbalanced by adenosine A2a adenosine receptors, antagonists of these receptors are being examined as an adjunct to conventional pharmacological therapies. However, little is known about the effects of sustained A2a receptor antagonism on striatal adaptations in PD models. To address this issue, the A2a receptor antagonist SCH58261 was systemically administered to DA-depleted mice. After 5 days of treatment, the effects of SCH58261 on iSPNs were examined in brain slices using electrophysiological and optical approaches. SCH58261 treatment did not prevent spine loss in iSPNs following depletion, but did significantly attenuate alterations in synaptic currents, spine morphology and dendritic excitability. In part, these effects were attributable to the ability of SCH58261 to blunt the effects of DA depletion on cholinergic interneurons, another striatal cell type that co-expresses A2a and D(2) receptors. Collectively, these results suggest that A2a receptor antagonism improves striatal function in PD models by attenuating iSPN adaptations to DA depletion.

PubMedSearch : Peterson_2012_Neurobiol.Dis_45_409
PubMedID: 21964253

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Citations formats

Peterson JD, Goldberg JA, Surmeier DJ (2012)
Adenosine A2a receptor antagonists attenuate striatal adaptations following dopamine depletion
Neurobiol Dis 45 :409

Peterson JD, Goldberg JA, Surmeier DJ (2012)
Neurobiol Dis 45 :409