3 resultados para Dopamine

em Universidade Federal do Pará


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A Doença de Parkinson (DP) é uma das doenças neurodegenerativas mais comuns relacionadas com a idade, e apresenta sintomatologia com alterações motoras clássicas que estão relacionadas com a degeneração dos neurônios dopaminérgicos da SNpc e a diminuição de dopamina no estriado. Modelos animais da DP são instrumentos importantes utilizados por pesquisadores para uma maior compreensão de mecanismos patológicos envolvidos na doença e para a avaliação de possíveis intervenções terapêuticas. Tais modelos devem mimetizar algum aspecto da doença, como a degeneração dos neurônios dopaminérgicos nigrais. Neste contexto, o modelo da DP induzido pela injeção da neurotoxina 6- hidroxidopamina (6-OHDA) já se encontra bem estabelecido em ratos, mas necessita ainda de melhor caracterização das alterações comportamentais e lesões no sistema nigro-estriatal em camundongos de diferentes linhagens a fim de que haja interpretações confiáveis quando o modelo for usado em testes terapêuticos. O presente estudo teve como objetivo melhorar a caracterização do modelo unilateral da DP com 6-OHDA em camundongos suíços, avaliando alterações comportamentais e o efeito sobre os neurônios dopaminérgicos da SNpc. Nesta investigação utilizou-se uma única injeção intraestriatal unilateral de 6-OHDA, em duas diferentes concentrações da toxina: 5µg/µl e 10µg/µl. Os nossos resultados mostraram que ambas as concentrações utilizadas causaram perda severa de neurônios dopaminérgicos na SNpc, com uma média de 74,5% e 89,5% de per da, respectivamente. Esta perda apresentou uma correlação alta com o comportamento rotatório induzido por apomorfina e uma correlação baixa com a ambulação no teste do campo aberto. Desta forma, injeções intraestriatais de 5µg/µl ou 10µg/µl de 6-OHDA, em camundongos suíços, reproduzem de forma efetiva o modelo animal unilateral da DP com 6-OHDA, podendo ser utilizadas de forma confiável em experimentos que visem a investigação de terapias farmacológicas, celulares e/ou de neuroproteção para a DP.

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We investigated the effects of adenosine on prolactin (PRL) secretion from rat anterior pituitaries incubated in vitro. The administration of 5-N- methylcarboxamidoadenosine (MECA), an analog agonist that preferentially activates A2 receptors, induced a dose-dependent (1 nM to 1 µM) increase in the levels of PRL released, an effect abolished by 1,3-dipropyl-7-methylxanthine, an antagonist of A2 adenosine receptors. In addition, the basal levels of PRL secretion were decreased by the blockade of cyclooxygenase or lipoxygenase pathways, with indomethacin and nordihydroguaiaretic acid (NDGA), respectively. The stimulatory effects of MECA on PRL secretion persisted even after the addition of indomethacin, but not of NDGA, to the medium. MECA was unable to stimulate PRL secretion in the presence of dopamine, the strongest inhibitor of PRL release that works by inducing a decrease in adenylyl cyclase activity. Furthermore, the addition of adenosine (10 nM) mimicked the effects of MECA on PRL secretion, an effect that persisted regardless of the presence of LiCl (5 mM). The basal secretion of PRL was significatively reduced by LiCl, and restored by the concomitant addition of both LiCl and myo-inositol. These results indicate that PRL secretion is under a multifactorial regulatory mechanism, with the participation of different enzymes, including adenylyl cyclase, inositol-1-phosphatase, cyclooxygenase, and lipoxygenase. However, the increase in PRL secretion observed in the lactotroph in response to A2 adenosine receptor activation probably was mediated by mechanisms involving regulation of adenylyl cyclase, independent of membrane phosphoinositide synthesis or cyclooxygenase activity and partially dependent on lipoxygenase arachidonic acid-derived substances.

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The influence of melatonin on the developmental pattern of functional nicotinic acetylcholine receptors was investigated in embryonic 8-day-old chick retinal cells in culture. The functional response to acetylcholine was measured in cultured retina cells by microphysiometry. The maximal functional response to acetylcholine increased 2.7 times between the 4th and 5th day in vitro (DIV4, DIV5), while the Bmax value for 125I-a-bungarotoxin was reduced. Despite the presence of a8-like immunoreactivity at DIV4, functional responses mediated by a-bungarotoxin-sensitive nicotinic acetylcholine receptors were observed only at DIV5. Mecamylamine (100 µM) was essentially without effect at DIV4 and DIV5, while dihydro-ß-erythroidine (10-100 µM) blocked the response to acetylcholine (3.0 nM-2.0 µM) only at DIV4, with no effect at DIV5. Inhibition of melatonin receptors with the antagonist luzindole, or melatonin synthesis by stimulation of D4 dopamine receptors blocked the appearance of the a-bungarotoxin-sensitive response at DIV5. Therefore, a-bungarotoxin-sensitive receptors were expressed in retinal cells as early as at DIV4, but they reacted to acetylcholine only after DIV5. The development of an a-bungarotoxin-sensitive response is dependent on the production of melatonin by the retinal culture. Melatonin, which is produced in a tonic manner by this culture, and is a key hormone in the temporal organization of vertebrates, also potentiates responses mediated by a-bungarotoxin-sensitive receptors in rat vas deferens and cerebellum. This common pattern of action on different cell models that express a-bungarotoxin-sensitive receptors probably reflects a more general mechanism of regulation of these receptors.