130 resultados para Ventral Striatum


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Huntington's disease (HD) is a monogenic neurodegenerative disease that affects the efferent neurons of the striatum. The protracted evolution of the pathology over 15 to 20 years, after clinical onset in adulthood, underscores the potential of therapeutic tools that would aim at protecting striatal neurons. Proteins with neuroprotective effects in the adult brain have been identified, among them ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF), which protected striatal neurons in animal models of HD. Accordingly, we have carried out a phase I study evaluating the safety of intracerebral administration of this protein in subjects with HD, using a device formed by a semipermeable membrane encapsulating a BHK cell line engineered to synthesize CNTF. Six subjects with stage 1 or 2 HD had one capsule implanted into the right lateral ventricle; the capsule was retrieved and exchanged for a new one every 6 months, over a total period of 2 years. No sign of CNTF-induced toxicity was observed; however, depression occurred in three subjects after removal of the last capsule, which may have correlated with the lack of any future therapeutic option. All retrieved capsules were intact but contained variable numbers of surviving cells, and CNTF release was low in 13 of 24 cases. Improvements in electrophysiological results were observed, and were correlated with capsules releasing the largest amount of CNTF. This phase I study shows the safety, feasibility, and tolerability of this gene therapy procedure. Heterogeneous cell survival, however, stresses the need for improving the technique.

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We have previously demonstrated disease-dependent gene delivery in the brain using an AAV vector responding to NFκB activation as a probe for inflammatory responses. This vector, injected focally in the parenchyma prior to a systemic kainic acid (KA) injection mediated inducible transgene expression in the hippocampus but not in the cerebellum, regions, respectively, known to be affected or not by the pathology. However, such a focal approach relies on previous knowledge of the model parameters and does not allow to predict the whole brain response to the disease. Global brain gene delivery would allow to predict the regional distribution of the pathology as well as to deliver therapeutic factors in all affected brain regions. We show that self-complementary AAV2/9 (scAAV2/9) delivery in the adult rat cisterna magna allows a widespread but not homogenous transduction of the brain. Indeed, superficial regions, i.e., cortex, hippocampus, and cerebellum were more efficiently transduced than deeper regions, such as striatum, and substantia nigra. These data suggest that viral particles penetration from the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) into the brain is a limiting factor. Interestingly, AAV2/9-2YF a rationally designed capsid mutant (affecting surface tyrosines) increased gene transfer efficiency approximately fivefold. Neurons, astrocytes, and oligodendrocytes, but not microglia, were transduced in varying proportions depending on the brain region and the type of capsid. Finally, after a single intracisternal injection of scAAV2/9-2YF using the NFκB-inducible promoter, KA treatment induced transgene expression in the hippocampus and cortex but not in the cerebellum, corresponding to the expression of the CD11b marker of microglial activation. These data support the use of disease-inducible vectors administered in the cisterna magna as a tool to characterize the brain pathology in systemic drug-induced or transgenic disease models. However, further improvements are required to enhance viral particles penetration into the brain.

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Traditionally, the ventral occipito-temporal (vOT) area, but not the superior parietal lobules (SPLs), is thought as belonging to the neural system of visual word recognition. However, some dyslexic children who exhibit a visual attention span disorder - i.e. poor multi-element parallel processing - further show reduced SPLs activation when engaged in visual multi-element categorization tasks. We investigated whether these parietal regions further contribute to letter-identity processing within strings. Adult skilled readers and dyslexic participants with a visual attention span disorder were administered a letter-string comparison task under fMRI. Dyslexic adults were less accurate than skilled readers to detect letter identity substitutions within strings. In skilled readers, letter identity differs related to enhanced activation of the left vOT. However, specific neural responses were further found in the superior and inferior parietal regions, including the SPLs bilaterally. Two brain regions that are specifically related to substituted letter detection, the left SPL and the left vOT, were less activated in dyslexic participants. These findings suggest that the left SPL, like the left vOT, may contribute to letter string processing.

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Recent studies at high magnetic fields using the phase of gradient-echo MR images have shown the ability to unveil cortical substructure in the human brain. To investigate the contrast mechanisms in phase imaging, this study extends, for the first time, phase imaging to the rodent brain. Using a 14.1 T horizontal bore animal MRI scanner for in vivo micro-imaging, images with an in-plane resolution of 33 microm were acquired. Phase images revealed, often more clearly than the corresponding magnitude images, hippocampal fields, cortical layers (e.g. layer 4), cerebellar layers (molecular and granule cell layers) and small white matter structures present in the striatum and septal nucleus. The contrast of the phase images depended in part on the orientation of anatomical structures relative to the magnetic field, consistent with bulk susceptibility variations between tissues. This was found not only for vessels, but also for white matter structures, such as the anterior commissure, and cortical layers in the cerebellum. Such susceptibility changes could result from variable blood volume. However, when the deoxyhemoglobin content was reduced by increasing cerebral blood flow (CBF) with a carbogen breathing challenge, contrast between white and gray matter and cortical layers was not affected, suggesting that tissue cerebral blood volume (and therefore deoxyhemoglobin) is not a major source of the tissue phase contrast. We conclude that phase variations in gradient-echo images are likely due to susceptibility shifts of non-vascular origin.

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Main developmental programs are highly conserved among species of the animal kingdom. Improper execution of these programs often leads to progression of various diseases and disorders. Here we focused on Drosophila wing tissue morphogenesis, a fairly complex developmental program, one of the steps of which - apposition of the dorsal and ventral wing sheets during metamorphosis - is mediated by integrins. Disruption of this apposition leads to wing blistering which serves as an easily screenable phenotype for components regulating this process. By means of RNAi-silencing technique and the blister phenotype as readout, we identify numerous novel proteins potentially involved in wing sheet adhesion. Remarkably, our results reveal not only participants of the integrin-mediated machinery, but also components of other cellular processes, e.g. cell cycle, RNA splicing, and vesicular trafficking. With the use of bioinformatics tools, these data are assembled into a large blisterome network. Analysis of human orthologues of the Drosophila blisterome components shows that many disease-related genes may contribute to cell adhesion implementation, providing hints on possible mechanisms of these human pathologies.

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Huntington's disease (HD) is an autosomal dominant neurodegenerative disorder caused by an expansion of CAG repeats in the huntingtin (Htt) gene. Despite intensive efforts devoted to investigating the mechanisms of its pathogenesis, effective treatments for this devastating disease remain unavailable. The lack of suitable models recapitulating the entire spectrum of the degenerative process has severely hindered the identification and validation of therapeutic strategies. The discovery that the degeneration in HD is caused by a mutation in a single gene has offered new opportunities to develop experimental models of HD, ranging from in vitro models to transgenic primates. However, recent advances in viral-vector technology provide promising alternatives based on the direct transfer of genes to selected sub-regions of the brain. Rodent studies have shown that overexpression of mutant human Htt in the striatum using adeno-associated virus or lentivirus vectors induces progressive neurodegeneration, which resembles that seen in HD. This article highlights progress made in modeling HD using viral vector gene transfer. We describe data obtained with of this highly flexible approach for the targeted overexpression of a disease-causing gene. The ability to deliver mutant Htt to specific tissues has opened pathological processes to experimental analysis and allowed targeted therapeutic development in rodent and primate pre-clinical models.

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The visual cortex in each hemisphere is linked to the opposite hemisphere by axonal projections that pass through the splenium of the corpus callosum. Visual-callosal connections in humans and macaques are found along the V1/V2 border where the vertical meridian is represented. Here we identify the topography of V1 vertical midline projections through the splenium within six human subjects with normal vision using diffusion-weighted MR imaging and probabilistic diffusion tractography. Tractography seed points within the splenium were classified according to their estimated connectivity profiles to topographic subregions of V1, as defined by functional retinotopic mapping. First, we report a ventral-dorsal mapping within the splenium with fibers from ventral V1 (representing the upper visual field) projecting to the inferior-anterior corner of the splenium and fibers from dorsal V1 (representing the lower visual field) projecting to the superior-posterior end. Second, we also report an eccentricity gradient of projections from foveal-to-peripheral V1 subregions running in the anterior-superior to posterior-inferior direction, orthogonal to the dorsal-ventral mapping. These results confirm and add to a previous diffusion MRI study (Dougherty et al., 2005) which identified a dorsal/ventral mapping of human splenial fibers. These findings yield a more detailed view of the structural organization of the splenium than previously reported and offer new opportunities to study structural plasticity in the visual system.

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Résumé : Malgré les immenses progrès réalisés depuis plusieurs années en médecine obstétricale ainsi qu'en réanimation néonatale et en recherche expérimentale, l'asphyxie périnatale, une situation de manque d'oxygène autour du moment de la naissance, reste une cause majeure de mortalité et de morbidité neurologique à long terme chez l'enfant (retard mental, paralysie cérébrale, épilepsie, problèmes d'apprentissages) sans toutefois de traitement pharmacologique réel. La nécessité de développer de nouvelles stratégies thérapeutiques pour les complications de l'asphyxie périnatale est donc aujourd'hui encore essentielle. Le but général de ce travail est l'identification de nouvelles cibles thérapeutiques impliquées dans des mécanismes moléculaires pathologiques induits par l'hypoxie-ischémie (HI) dans le cerveau immature. Pour cela, le modèle d'asphyxie périnatale (proche du terme) le plus reconnu chez le rongeur a été développé (modèle de Rice et Vannucci). Il consiste en la ligature permanente d'une artère carotide commune (ischémie) chez le raton de 7 jours combinée à une période d'hypoxie à 8% d'oxygène. Il permet ainsi d'étudier les lésions de type hypoxique-ischémique dans différentes régions cérébrales dont le cortex, l'hippocampe, le striatum et le thalamus. La première partie de ce travail a abordé le rôle de deux voies de MAPK, JNK et p38, après HI néonatale chez le raton à l'aide de peptides inhibiteurs. Tout d'abord, nous avons démontré que D-JNKI1, un peptide inhibiteur de la voie de JNK présentant de fortes propriétés neuroprotectrices dans des modèles d'ischémie cérébrale adulte ainsi que chez le jeune raton, peut intervenir sur différentes voies de mort dont l'activation des calpaïnes (marqueur de la nécrose précoce), l'activation de la caspase-3 (marqueur de l'apoptose) et l'expression de LC3-II (marqueur de macroautophagie). Malgré ces effets positifs le traitement au D-JNKI1 ne modifie pas l'étendue de la lésion cérébrale. L'action limitée de D-JNKI1 peut s'expliquer par une implication modérée des JNKs (faiblement activées et principalement l'isotype JNK3) après HI néonatale sévère. Au contraire, l'inhibition de la voie de nNOS/p38 par le peptide DTAT-GESV permet une augmentation de 20% du volume du tissu sain à court et long terme. Le second projet a étudié les effets de l'HI néonatale sur l'autophagie neuronale. En effet, l'autophagie est un processus catabolique essentiel au bien-être de la cellule. Le type principal d'autophagie (« macroautophagie » , que nous appellerons par la suite « autophagie ») consiste en la séquestration d'éléments à dégrader (protéines ou organelles déficients) dans un compartiment spécialisé, l'autophagosome, qui fusionne avec un lysosome pour former un autolysosome où le contenu est dégradé par les hydrolases lysosomales. Depuis peu, l'excès ou la dérégulation de l'autoptiagie a pu être impliqué dans la mort cellulaire en certaines conditions de stress. Ce travail démontre que l'HI néonatale chez le raton active fortement le flux autophagique, c'est-à-dire augmente la formation des autophagosomes et des autolysosomes, dans les neurones en souffrance. De plus, la relation entre l'autophagie et l'apoptose varie selon la région cérébrale. En effet, alors que dans le cortex les neurones en voie de mort présentent des caractéristiques mixtes apoptotiques et autophagiques, ceux du CA3 sont essentiellement autophagiques et ceux du CA1 sont principalement apoptotiques. L'induction de l'autophagie après HI néonatale semble donc participer à la mort neuronale soit par l'enclenchement de l'apoptose soit comme mécanisme de mort en soi. Afin de comprendre la relation pouvant exister entre autophagie et apoptase un troisième projet a été réalisé sur des cultures primaires de neurones corticaux exposés à un stimulus apoptotique classique, la staurosporine (STS). Nous avons démontré que l'apoptose induite par la STS était précédée et accompagnée par une forte activation du flux autophagique neuronal. L'inhibition de l'autophagie de manière pharmacologique (3-MA) ou plus spécifiquement par ARNs d'interférence dirigés contre deux protéines autophagiques importantes (Atg7 et Atg5) a permis de mettre en évidence des rôles multiples de l'autophagie dans la mort neuronale. En effet, l'autophagie prend non seulement part à une voie de mort parallèle à l'apoptose pouvant être impliquée dans l'activation des calpaïnes, mais est également partiellement responsable de l'induction des voies apoptotiques (activation de la caspase-3 et translocation nucléaire d'AIF). En conclusion, ce travail a montré que l'inhibition de JNK par D-JNKI1 n'est pas un outil neuroprotecteur efficace pour diminuer la mort neuronale provoquée par l'asphyxie périnatalé sévère, et met en lumière deux autres voies thérapeutiques beaucoup plus prometteuses, l'inhibition de nNOS/p38 ou de l'autophagie. ABSTRACT : Despite enormous progress over the last«decades in obstetrical and neonatal medicine and experimental research, perinatal asphyxia, a situation of lack of oxygen around the time of the birth, remains a major cause of mortality and long term neurological morbidity in children (mental retardation, cerebral palsy, epilepsy, learning difficulties) without any effective treatment. It is therefore essential to develop new therapeutic strategies for the complications of perinatal asphyxia. The overall aim of this work was to identify new therapeutic targets involved in pathological molecular mechanisms induced by hypoxia-ischemia (HI) in the immature brain. For this purpose, the most relevant model of perinatal asphyxia (near term) in rodents has been developed (model of Rice and Vannucci). It consists in the permanent ligation of one common carotid artery (ischemia) in the 7-day-old rat combined with a period of hypoxia at 8% oxygen. This model allows the study of the hypoxic-ischemic lesion in different brain regions including the cortex, hippocampus, striatum and thalamus. The first part of this work addressed the role of two MAPK pathways (JNK and p38) after rat neonatal HI using inhibitory peptides. First, we demonstrated that D-JNKI1, a JNK peptide inhibitor presenting strong neuroprotective properties in models of cerebral ischemia in adult and young rats, could affect different cell death mechanisms including the activation of calpain (a marker of necrosis) and caspase-3 (a marker of apoptosis), and the expression of LC3-II (a marker of macroautophagy). Despite these positive effects, D-JNKI1 did not modify the extent of brain damage. The limited action of D-JNKI1 can be explained by the fact that JNKs were only moderately involved (weakly activated and principally the JNK3 isotype) after severe neonatal HI. In contrast, inhibition of nNOS/p38 by the peptide D-TAT-GESV increased the surviving tissue volume by around 20% at short and long term. The second project investigated the effects of neonatal HI on neuronal autophagy. Indeed, autophagy is a catabolic process essential to the well-being of the cell. The principal type of autophagy ("macroautophagy", that we shall henceforth call "autophagy") involves the sequestration of elements to be degraded (deficient proteins or organelles) in a specialized compartment, the autophagosome, which fuses with a lysosome to form an autolysosome where the content is degraded by lysosomal hydrolases. Recently, an excess or deregulation of autophagy has been implicated in cell death in some stress conditions. The present study demonstrated that rat neonatal HI highly enhanced autophagic flux, i.e. increased autophagosome and autolysosome formation, in stressed neurons. Moreover, the relationship between autophagy and apoptosis varies according to the brain region. Indeed, whereas dying neurons in the cortex exhibited mixed features of apoptosis and autophagy, those in CA3 were primarily autophagíc and those in CA1 were mainly apoptotic. The induction of autophagy after neonatal HI seems to participate in neuronal death either by triggering apoptosis or as a death mechanism per se. To understand the relationships that may exist between autophagy and apoptosis, a third project has been conducted using primary cortical neuronal cultures exposed to a classical apoptotic stimulus, staurosporine (STS). We demonstrated that STS-induced apoptosis was preceded and accompanied by a strong activation of neuronal autophagic flux. Inhibition of autophagy pharmacologically (3-MA) or more specifically by RNA interference directed against two important autophagic proteins (Atg7 and AtgS) showed multiple roles of autophagy in neuronal death. Indeed, autophagy was not only involved in a death pathway parallel to apoptosis possibly involved in the activation of calpains, but was also partially responsible for the induction of apoptotic pathways (caspase-3 activation and AIF nuclear translocation). In conclusion, this study showed that JNK inhibition by D-JNKI1 is not an effective neuroprotective tool for decreasing neuronal death following severe perinatal asphyxia, but highlighted two more promising therapeutic approaches, inhibition of the nNOSlp38 pathway or of autophagy.

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We report the case of a 37-year-old man suffering from insidious visual agnosia and spastic paraparesis due to a PSEN1 mutation. His mother was diagnosed with Alzheimer disease after a biopsy. He was assessed by multimodal neuroimaging, including new in vivo positron emission tomography amyloid imaging (F-AV45). His data were compared with those from healthy participants and patients with sporadic predemential Alzheimer disease. He exhibited posterior cortical thickness reduction, posterior hypometabolism, and increased amyloid ligand uptake in the posterior cortex and the striatum. We show that F-AV45 positron emission tomography allows visualization of the unusual pattern of amyloid deposits that co-localize with cortical atrophy in this genetic form of Alzheimer disease.

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Background: Previous magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies in young patients with bipolar disorder indicated the presence of grey matter concentration changes as well as microstructural alterations in white matter in various neocortical areas and the corpus callosum. Whether these structural changes are also present in elderly patients with bipolar disorder with long-lasting clinical evolution remains unclear. Methods: We performed a prospective MRI study of consecutive elderly, euthymic patients with bipolar disorder and healthy, elderly controls. We conducted a voxel-based morphometry (VBM) analysis and a tract-based spatial statistics (TBSS) analysis to assess fractional anisotropy and longitudinal, radial and mean diffusivity derived by diffusion tensor imaging (DTI). Results: We included 19 patients with bipolar disorder and 47 controls in our study. Fractional anisotropy was the most sensitive DTI marker and decreased significantly in the ventral part of the corpus callosum in patients with bipolar disorder. Longitudinal, radial and mean diffusivity showed no significant between-group differences. Grey matter concentration was reduced in patients with bipolar disorder in the right anterior insula, head of the caudate nucleus, nucleus accumbens, ventral putamen and frontal orbital cortex. Conversely, there was no grey matter concentration or fractional anisotropy increase in any brain region in patients with bipolar disorder compared with controls. Limitations: The major limitation of our study is the small number of patients with bipolar disorder. Conclusion: Our data document the concomitant presence of grey matter concentration decreases in the anterior limbic areas and the reduced fibre tract coherence in the corpus callosum of elderly patients with long-lasting bipolar disorder.

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The detection of Parkinson's disease (PD) in its preclinical stages prior to outright neurodegeneration is essential to the development of neuroprotective therapies and could reduce the number of misdiagnosed patients. However, early diagnosis is currently hampered by lack of reliable biomarkers. (1) H magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) offers a noninvasive measure of brain metabolite levels that allows the identification of such potential biomarkers. This study aimed at using MRS on an ultrahigh field 14.1 T magnet to explore the striatal metabolic changes occurring in two different rat models of the disease. Rats lesioned by the injection of 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) in the medial-forebrain bundle were used to model a complete nigrostriatal lesion while a genetic model based on the nigral injection of an adeno-associated viral (AAV) vector coding for the human α-synuclein was used to model a progressive neurodegeneration and dopaminergic neuron dysfunction, thereby replicating conditions closer to early pathological stages of PD. MRS measurements in the striatum of the 6-OHDA rats revealed significant decreases in glutamate and N-acetyl-aspartate levels and a significant increase in GABA level in the ipsilateral hemisphere compared with the contralateral one, while the αSyn overexpressing rats showed a significant increase in the GABA striatal level only. Therefore, we conclude that MRS measurements of striatal GABA levels could allow for the detection of early nigrostriatal defects prior to outright neurodegeneration and, as such, offers great potential as a sensitive biomarker of presymptomatic PD.

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Vitamin E, vitamin A, and carotenoids are essential micronutrients for animals because of their antioxidant and immunostimulant functions and their implications for growth, development, and reproduction. In contrast to mammals and birds, information about their occurrence and distribution is generally lacking in reptiles, constraining our understanding of the use of these micronutrients. Using high-performance liquid chromatography, we determined the concentrations of vitamin E, vitamin A, and carotenoids in plasma, storage sites (liver and abdominal fat bodies), and in the colored ventral skin of male Common Lizards, Lacerta vivipara. All tissues shared a similar micronutrient profile, except the liver, which also showed traces of vitamin A(1). The main vitamin E compound present was a-tocopherol followed by lower concentrations of gamma-(beta-)tocopherol. Vitamin A(2) was the main vitamin A compound and it showed the highest concentration in the liver, where vitamin A(2) esters and traces of vitamin A(1) were found. Lutein was the main carotenoid, and it formed esters in the liver and the ventral skin. Zeaxanthin and low concentrations of beta-carotene were also present. The liver was the main storage site for carotenoid and vitamin A, whereas hepatic vitamin E concentrations resembled those present in abdominal Fat bodies. Compared with abdominal fat bodies, the ventral skin contained lower concentrations of vitamin A and vitamin E, but similar concentrations of carotenoicls. These results suggest that important differences exist in micronutrient presence, concentration, and distribution among tissues of lizards and other taxa such as birds and mammals.

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The cistern of the velum interpositum is a space located between the corpus callosum dorsally and the roof of the third ventricle ventrally. Lesions located within the velum interpositum are rare and include meningiomas, pilocytic astrocytomas, atypical teratoid/rhabdoid tumors and arachnoid cysts. Epidermoid cysts in this location have not been reported previously. We report the clinical and radiological features of two patients with epidermoid cysts located in the velum interpositum. The patients presented with gait difficulty and features of raised intracranial pressure and magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated large tumors in the velum interpositum with intensities suggestive of epidermoid cysts. There was ventral displacement of the internal cerebral veins and dorsal displacement of the corpus callosum in keeping with a mass in the velum interpositum. Tumors of the third ventricle displace the internal cerebral veins dorsally. A transcallosal approach was used in both patients to effectively excise the tumors.

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The potential for "replacement cells" to restore function in Parkinson's disease has been widely reported over the past 3 decades, rejuvenating the central nervous system rather than just relieving symptoms. Most such experiments have used fetal or embryonic sources that may induce immunological rejection and generate ethical concerns. Autologous sources, in which the cells to be implanted are derived from recipients' own cells after reprogramming to stem cells, direct genetic modifications, or epigenetic modifications in culture, could eliminate many of these problems. In a previous study on autologous brain cell transplantation, we demonstrated that adult monkey brain cells, obtained from cortical biopsies and kept in culture for 7 weeks, exhibited potential as a method of brain repair after low doses of 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP) caused dopaminergic cell death. The present study exposed monkeys to higher MPTP doses to produce significant parkinsonism and behavioral impairments. Cerebral cortical cells were biopsied from the animals, held in culture for 7 weeks to create an autologous neural cell "ecosystem" and reimplanted bilaterally into the striatum of the same six donor monkeys. These cells expressed neuroectodermal and progenitor markers such as nestin, doublecortin, GFAP, neurofilament, and vimentin. Five to six months after reimplantation, histological analysis with the dye PKH67 and unbiased stereology showed that reimplanted cells survived, migrated bilaterally throughout the striatum, and seemed to exert a neurorestorative effect. More tyrosine hydroxylase-immunoreactive neurons and significant behavioral improvement followed reimplantation of cultured autologous neural cells as a result of unknown trophic factors released by the grafts. J. Comp. Neurol. 522:2729-2740, 2014. © 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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Evidence of altered antioxidant systems and signs of elevated oxidative stress are reported in peripheral tissue and brain of schizophrenic patients, including low levels of glutathione (GSH), a major thiol antioxidant and redox buffer. Functional and genetic data indicate that an impaired regulation of GSH synthesis is a vulnerability factor for the disease. Impaired GSH synthesis from a genetic origin combined with environmental risk factors generating oxidative stress (e.g., malnutrition, exposure to toxins, maternai infection and diabetes, obstetrical complications, and psychological stress) could lead to redox dysregulation. This could subsequently perturb normal brain development and maturation with delayed functional consequences emerging in early adulthood. Depending on the nature and the time of occurrence of the environmental insults, the structural and functional delayed consequences could vary, giving rise to various endophenotypes. The use of animal models of GSH deficit represents a valuable approach to investigate how interactions between genetic and environmental factors lead to the emergence of pathologies found in the disease. Moreover, these models of GSH can be useful to investigate links between schizophrenia and comorbid somatic disorders, as dysregulation of the GSH system and elevated oxidative stress are also found in cardiovascular diseases and diabetes. This chapter reviews pharmacological and genetic rodent models of GSH synthesis dysregulation used to address some of the aforementioned issues. Up to date, these models revealed that GSH deficits lead to morphological, physiological, and behavioral alterations that are quite analogous to pathologies observed in patients. This includes hypofunction of NMDA receptors, alteration of dopamine neurotransmission, anomalies in parvalbumin-immunoreactive fast-spiking interneurons, and reduced myelination. In addition, a GSH deficit affects the brain in a region-specific manner, the anterior cingulate cortex and the ventral hippocampus being the most vulnerable regions investigated. Interestingly, a GSH deficit during a limited period of postnatal development is sufficient to have long-lasting consequences on the integrity of PV-IR interneurons in the anterior cingulate cortex and impairs cognitive functions in adulthood. Finally, these animal models of GSH deficit display behavioral impairments that could be related to schizophrenia. Altogether, current data strongly support a contributing role of a redox dysregulation on the development of pathologies associated with the illness and demonstrate the usefulness of these models to better understand the biological mechanisms leading to schizophrenia.