Pathological intracellular aggregation of alpha-synuclein (a-syn) is the hallmark of Parkinson’s disease (PD). Our aim is to explore the outcomes of long-term a-syn pathology with its functional correlates in the PD model by AAV (adeno-associated virus)-mediated a-syn overexpression in substantia nigra (SN). Female Wistar rats (220-260 g) received a unilateral injection of AAV-human-a-syn or green fluorescent protein (GFP) gene into the SN. The animals were tested for motor functions with cylinder test at 8, 12 weeks or 9 months post-injection. The intensity of a-syn accumulation or GFP in striatum and dopaminergic neuronal loss in SN, dopaminergic terminal loss in striatum and synaptic integrity were analyzed by a-syn, GFP, tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) and synaptophsin immunohistochemistry, respectively. At all time-points, AAV-human-a-syn injected animals displayed more motor dysfunction and TH- positive cell loss compared to AAV-GFP injected group. A-syn immunoreactivity was present in the nigral neurons as well as the striatal terminals in all animals that received AAV-a-syn. Striatal TH density analysis showed a decrease in both 12-weeks and 9 months a-syn groups compared to controls. However, TH-positive neuron count was lower in 9- months group compared to 12-weeks group. Hence, the motor performance of 9-month group showed an improvement which may be a sign of a compensatory mechanisms against a-syn-induced neurodegeneration. The findings of this study implicate that higher a-syn density in SN does not always lead to worse motor function or more severe dopaminergic cell loss. This may support the hypothesis that a-syn aggregates are the end-product of a cellular defense mechanism rather than being causative pathology.
| Primary Language | English |
|---|---|
| Subjects | Basic Pharmacology, Medical Pharmacology |
| Journal Section | Research Article |
| Authors | |
| Publication Date | June 27, 2025 |
| DOI | https://doi.org/10.29228/jrp.25 |
| IZ | https://izlik.org/JA34MU87LA |
| Published in Issue | Year 2021 Volume: 25 Issue: 3 |