Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:1.14.16.2 (
tyrosine hydroxylase
)
14,760
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Addition of embryonic striatal tissue, usually as a combination of the lateral and medial ganglionic eminences, to intrastriatal mesencephalic grafts has previously been reported to enhance recovery of drug-induced rotational behavior in the host and to modify axonal fiber outgrowth from the grafted dopaminergic neurons. This study investigated the effects of adding (cografting) either lateral or medial ganglionic eminence tissue to embryonic mesencephalic grafts implanted intrastriatally, in rats with unilateral 6-hydroxydopamine lesions. The cografts did not exhibit increased survival or cell size of dopaminergic neurons when compared to transplants of mesencephalic tissue alone. Neither did recipients of cografts exhibit any enhancement of graft-induced
recovery of function
, when tested for drug-induced rotational behavior or forelimb function in the staircase test. However, cografts containing lateral ganglionic eminence displayed patches of dense
tyrosine hydroxylase
-immunoreactive fibers within the graft tissue. These patches largely coincided with patches in adjacent stained sections, which were rich in immunostaining for the striatal-specific marker dopamine- and cyclic AMP-regulated phosphoprotein-32 (DARPP-32). Such patches were not present in rats receiving cografts containing medial ganglionic eminence or mesencephalic tissue alone. Thus, it seems that the grafted dopaminergic neurons preferentially grow into the areas of the transplants containing lateral ganglionic eminence tissue. In summary, the results suggest that embryonic lateral ganglionic eminence exerts trophic effects on the outgrowth of dopaminergic axons, but does not enhance the behavioral effects of grafted dopaminergic neurons.
...
PMID:Addition of lateral ganglionic eminence to rat mesencephalic grafts affects fiber outgrowth but does not enhance function. 917 Nov 60
One approach to replace lost dopaminergic neurons in Parkinson's disease is to transplant fetal mesencephalic tissue into the striatum. In an attempt to expand the developmental window useful for grafting of mesencephalic tissue and increase the fiber outgrowth from grafted dopaminergic neurons, we have pretreated fetal mesencephalic tissue with the dopaminotrophic factor glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF). Mesencephalic tissue pieces from embryonic day 18-19 Fischer 344 rats were preincubated for 20 min with GDNF (1 microg/microl) or vehicle. Two tissue pieces were then transplanted into the striatum of rats that had been unilaterally lesioned by medial forebrain bundle injections of 6-hydroxydopamine. The animals were tested for apomorphine-induced rotations prior to intracranial grafting. Host rats received intrastriatal injections of 10 microg GDNF or control solution at 10 days and 4 weeks postgrafting. The animals were tested in the rotometer twice monthly following transplantation. Despite the fact that these transplants were from a suboptimal donor stage, the rotations were significantly decreased in both transplanted groups. Immunohistochemical evaluation of the host brains revealed that the overall size of transplanted mesencephalic tissue was significantly increased in the GDNF-treated animals, and that the average size of transplanted
tyrosine hydroxylase
(TH)-positive neurons was also increased. Furthermore, we found that the innervation density of surrounding host striatal tissue was significantly increased in the GDNF-treated group, as compared with controls. Taken together, these results suggest that treatment of intrastriatal ventral mesencephalon grafts with GDNF can optimize the conditions for intracranial grafting and thus improve the chances for
functional recovery
following the intrastriatal grafting procedure.
...
PMID:Glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor improves survival of ventral mesencephalic grafts to the 6-hydroxydopamine lesioned striatum. 930 12
The ability of intrastriatally-administered glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor to induce reinnervation and
functional recovery
in the partially-lesioned nigrostriatal dopamine system was explored in rats subjected to an axon terminal lesion induced by injection of 6-hydroxydopamine into the striatum. Glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor was administered as multiple intrastriatal injections (10 x 5 micrograms) over a three-week period starting four weeks after the 6-hydroxydopamine injection, i.e. at the time when the acute phase of degeneration of the nigral dopamine neurons is complete. In the control group the lesion induced a 75-90% reduction of the dopaminergic innervation in the dorsolateral striatum (assessed by [3H]N-[1-(2-benzo(b)thiopenyl)cyclohexyl]piperidine-labelled dopamine uptake sites), and an approximately 50% reduction in the number of
tyrosine hydroxylase
-positive cell bodies in the central part of the substantia nigra, accompanied by a significant impairment in spontaneous motor behaviour, as assessed by a forelimb stepping test. In the glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor-treated animals striatal [3H]N-[1-(2-benzo(b)thiopenyl)cyclohexyl]piperidine binding was restored to 70-95% of normal and contralateral forelimb stepping was completely normalized. The extent of striatal denervation in the individual lesioned and treated animals was well correlated with the performance of the affected limb in the stepping test. These results show that intrastriatal glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor can stimulate substantial axonal sprouting and reinnervation of the partially deafferated striatum to a degree sufficient to reverse the lesion-induced deficit in spontaneous motoric behaviour, indicating that a direct action of glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor on spared dopaminergic afferents in the striatum may be important for
functional recovery
in the rat Parkinson model.
...
PMID:Intrastriatal glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor promotes sprouting of spared nigrostriatal dopaminergic afferents and induces recovery of function in a rat model of Parkinson's disease. 948 9
This study concerns
functional recovery
of zebrafish following spinal cord transection. Spinal cords were transected at the level of the 14th vertebra, just rostral to the dorsal fin. Recovery was tested at one month after transection when descending fibers start to regrow across the transection site and at three months after transection when fish perform kick and glide swimming. To estimate the rate of regrowth across the lesion site we analysed the
tyrosine hydroxylase
(TH) and dorsal 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) systems in distal parts of lesioned cords. Both systems have cell bodies in the brainstem and in control fish TH- and dorsal 5-HT-containing fibers descend to all spinal segments. Swimming performance was studied by subjecting lesioned fish to endurance tests in a swimming tunnel with water flowing at a constant rate of 2 or 4.5 body lengths per second (BL/s). At 2 BL/s slow myotomal muscles are active whereas at 4.5 BL/s fast myotomal muscles are recruited. Control fish endured sustained swimming at both speeds for at least 3 hours. As a measure for the condition of the neuromuscular system in trunk and tail, we analysed aerobic metabolic capacities, assessed by NADH-tetrazolium reductase (NADH-TR) histochemistry of myotomal muscle fibers and spinal lateral neuropil. We found that TH- and dorsal 5-HT-immunoreactive fibers were absent in the entire distal part of lesioned cords at one month but at two months after transection they were present at approximately 6000 microns caudally to the site of the lesion. Thus the rate of outgrowth of these fibers is at least 200 microns per day. Sustained swimming at the slow speed (2 BL/s) could be endured for about 14.4 min at one month and for 23.5 min at two months after transection; there was no further improvement in the period that followed. In contrast, in the 10 weeks following transection, fast swimming (4.5 BL/s) could be endured for about 5 to 6 minutes. A significant improvement was gained in the period of 10 to 12 weeks after transection when fish could endure the high speed for almost 15 min. The aerobic capacity of muscle fibers in distal parts of the body was not strongly affected by the lesion. The only important change in aerobic capacity was observed in the neuropil of distal parts of the cords where, at three months after transection, NADH-TR activity was increased to approximately 150% of control values. On the basis of our findings, we assume that it is not the condition of the neuromuscular system, but rather a deficient co-ordination between proximal and distal body parts of lesioned fish that accounts for the relatively poor performances in endurance tests. Furthermore, differences in timing of improvements in swimming at 2 and 4.5 BL/s indicate that the spinal circuitries serving the slow parts of the neuromuscular system recover at an earlier stage than those serving the fast parts.
...
PMID:Long term effects of spinal cord transection in zebrafish: swimming performances, and metabolic properties of the neuromuscular system. 958 24
Possible biologic treatments for Parkinson's disease, a disorder caused by the deterioration of dopaminergic neurons bridging the nigrostriatal system, have recently focused on fetal cell transplantation. Because of ethical and tissue availability issues concerning fetal cell transplantation, alternative cell sources are being developed. The adrenal medulla has been used as a cell transplant source because of the capacity of the cells to provide catecholamines and to transform into a neuronal phenotype. However, adrenal tissue transplants have shown limited success, primarily because of their lack of long-term viability. Recently, seeding adrenal chromaffin cells on microcarrier beads has been shown to enhance the cell viability following neural transplantation. In the present study, we further investigated whether transplantation of rat adrenal chromaffin cells seeded on microcarrier beads into the striatum of 6-hydroxydopamine-induced hemiparkinsonian rats would result in a sustained
functional recovery
. Behavioral tests using the apomorphine-induced rotational and elevated body swing tests up to 12 months posttransplantation revealed a significant behavioral recovery in animals that received adrenal chromaffin cells seeded on microcarrier beads compared to animals that received adrenal chromaffin cells alone, medium alone, or beads alone. Histological examination of tissue at 14 months posttransplantation revealed evidence of
tyrosine hydroxylase
-positive cells and an on-going glial response in animals transplanted with adrenal chromaffin cells seeded on microcarrier beads, in contrast to absence of such immunoreactive responses in the other groups. These findings support a facilitator role for microcarrier beads in transplantation of adrenal chromaffin cells or other cells that are easily rejected by the CNS.
...
PMID:Intrastriatal transplantation of rat adrenal chromaffin cells seeded on microcarrier beads promote long-term functional recovery in hemiparkinsonian rats. 962 55
Partial lesions of the nigrostriatal dopamine system have been investigated with respect to their ability to induce consistent long-lasting deficits in movement initiation and skilled forelimb use. In eight different lesion groups 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) was injected at one, two, three, or four sites into the lateral sector of the right striatum, in a total dose of 20-30 microgram. Impairments in movement initiation in a forelimb stepping test, and in skilled paw use in a paw-reaching test, was seen only in animals where the severity of the lesion exceeded a critical threshold, which was different for the different tests used: single (1 x 20 microgram) or two-site (2 x 10 microgram) injections into the striatum had only small affects on forelimb stepping, no effect on skilled paw use. More pronounced deficits were obtained in animals where the same total dose of 6-OHDA was distributed over three or four sites along the rostro-caudal extent of the lateral striatum or where the injections were made close to the junction of the globus pallidus. The results show that a 60-70% reduction in
tyrosine hydroxylase
(TH)-positive fiber density in the lateral striatum, accompanied by a 50-60% reduction in TH-positive cells in substantia nigra (SN), is sufficient for the induction of significant impairment in initiation of stepping. Impaired skilled paw-use, on the other hand, was obtained only with a four-site (4 x 7 microgram) lesion, which induced 80-95% reduction in TH fiber density throughout the rostrocaudal extent of the lateral striatum and a 75% loss of TH-positive neurons in SN. Drug-induced rotation, by contrast, was observed also in animals with more restricted presymptomatic lesions. The results indicate that the four-site intrastriatal 6-OHDA lesion may be a relevant model of the neuropathology seen in parkinsonian patients in a manifest symptomatic stage of the disease and may be particularly useful experimentally since it leaves a significant portion of the nigrostriatal projection intact which can serve as a substrate for regeneration and
functional recovery
in response to growth promoting and neuroprotective agents.
...
PMID:Characterization of behavioral and neurodegenerative changes following partial lesions of the nigrostriatal dopamine system induced by intrastriatal 6-hydroxydopamine in the rat. 971 May 26
The causes of death of transplanted neurons are not known in detail, but apoptotic mechanisms involving caspase activation are likely to play a role. We examined whether overexpression of the anti-apoptotic protein Bcl-2 may enhance the survival of dopaminergic [
tyrosine hydroxylase
(TH)-immunoreactive] grafted neurons. For this purpose, we prepared cells from embryonic day 13 ventral mesencephalon (VM) of mice overexpressing human Bcl-2, or from their wild-type littermates. The bcl-2 transgene was strongly expressed in these cells, and resulted in protection of neuronal cultures from death triggered by serum deprivation or exposure to staurosporine. To model pretransplantation stress more closely in vitro, we stored dissociated embryonic mesencephalic cells for 8 h in the same type of medium used for intracerebral transplantation. This resulted in massive cell death as quantified by lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) release, and increased DNA fragmentation. Although this cell loss was strongly reduced by a caspase inhibitor, Bcl-2 had no significant protective effect. Finally, mesencephalic cell suspensions were xenografted into the striatum of immunosuppressed hemiparkinsonian rats. Neither the survival of TH-immunopositive transplanted neurons nor the
functional recovery
of the rats was improved by Bcl-2, although the Bcl-2 protein was strongly expressed in transgenic grafts 5 weeks after implantation, and dopaminergic fibre outgrowth from the grafts was significantly improved. These data suggest that cell death in neuronal transplants involves apoptotic mechanisms that can bypass negative regulation by Bcl-2.
...
PMID:Differential effects of Bcl-2 overexpression on fibre outgrowth and survival of embryonic dopaminergic neurons in intracerebral transplants. 1051 Jan 71
Glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) has prominent survival-promoting effects on lesioned nigrostriatal dopamine neurons, but understanding of the conditions under which
functional recovery
can be obtained remains to be acquired. We report here the time course of nigrostriatal axon degeneration in the partial lesion model of Parkinson's disease and the morphological and functional effects of sequential administration of GDNF in the substantia nigra (SN) and striatum during the first 5 weeks postlesion. By 1 day postlesion, the nigrostriatal axons had retracted back to the level of the caudal globus pallidus. Over the next 6 days axonal retraction progressed down to the SN, and during the following 7 weeks 74% of
tyrosine hydroxylase
-positive (TH(+)) and 84% of retrogradely labeled nigral neurons were lost, with a more pronounced loss in the rostral part of the SN. GDNF administration protected 70 and 72% of the nigral TH(+) and retrogradely labeled cell bodies, respectively, but did not prevent the die-back of the lesioned nigrostriatal axons. Although clear signs of sprouting were observed close to the injection site in the striatum as well as in the globus pallidus, the overall DA innervation of the striatum [as measured by [(3)H]-N-[1-(2-benzo(b)thiopenyl)cyclohexyl]piperidine-binding autoradiography] was not improved by the GDNF treatment. Moreover, the lesion-induced deficits in forelimb akinesia and drug-induced rotation were not attenuated. We conclude that
functional recovery
in the partial lesion model depends not only on preservation of the nigral cell bodies, but more critically on the ability of GDNF to promote significant reinnervation of the denervated striatum.
...
PMID:Sequential administration of GDNF into the substantia nigra and striatum promotes dopamine neuron survival and axonal sprouting but not striatal reinnervation or functional recovery in the partial 6-OHDA lesion model. 1068 72
The rat adrenal cortex has the uncommon ability to demonstrate morphological and functional regeneration after injury-induced loss of cortical tissue. Peripheral nerves are involved in tissue regeneration and healing after injury, implying that nerves may also be involved in modulating the regeneration of the adrenal cortex. Studies were initiated to assess changes in adrenal innervation during cortical tissue regeneration subsequent to adrenal enucleation. Innervation of regenerating adrenals was assessed from 3 to 62 days postenucleation by immunohistofluorescent detection of neuronal markers for primary afferent, preganglionic sympathetic, and postganglionic sympathetic fibers. The regenerating adrenal contained few nerves at 3 days postenucleation, but became differentially innervated, with extensive innervation by nerve fibers positive for calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP),
tyrosine hydroxylase
(TH), neuropeptide Y (NPY), and neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS). In contrast, there was only minimal innervation by nerve fibers positive for vasoactive intestinal peptide. By 14 days postenucleation, the CGRP-, TH-, and NPY-positive innervation included areas of hyperinnervation in the capsule, cortex, and central inflammatory site of the regenerating gland. In addition, many chromaffin cells were present at all time points postenucleation. Quantification of the regenerating gland content of CGRP, norepinephrine, epinephrine, and nNOS verified the immunohistofluorescent observations. The period of extensive innervation correlated temporally with the time (3-30 days) during which the regenerating glands recovered steroidogenic function. Moreover, splanchnic nerve transection at the time of adrenal enucleation decreased the innervation by CGRP-positive and vesicular acetylcholine transporter-positive fibers and delayed regeneration. These results support the hypothesis that adrenal innervation modulates tissue regeneration and
functional recovery
of the enucleated adrenal gland.
...
PMID:Hyperinnervation during adrenal regeneration influences the rate of functional recovery. 1068 25
The clinical findings on neural transplantation for Parkinson's disease (PD) reported thus far are promising but many issues must be addressed before neural transplantation can be considered a routine therapeutic option for PD. The future of neural transplantation for the treatment of neurological disorders may rest in the discovery of a suitable alternative cell type for fetal tissue. One such alternative may be neurons derived from a human teratocarcinoma (hNT). hNT neurons have been shown to survive and integrate within the host brain following transplantation and provide
functional recovery
in animal models of stroke and Huntington's disease. In this study, we describe the transplantation of hNT neurons in the substantia nigra (SN) and striatum of the rat model for PD. Twenty-seven rats were grafted with one of three hNT neuronal products; hNT neurons, hNT-DA neurons, or lithium chloride (LiCl) pretreated hNT-DA neurons. Robust hNT grafts could be seen with anti-neural cell adhesion molecule and anti-neuron-specific enolase immunostaining. Immunostaining for
tyrosine hydroxylase
(TH) expression revealed no TH-immunoreactive (THir) neurons in any animals with hNT neuronal grafts. THir cells were observed in 43% of animals with hNT-DA neuronal grafts and all animals with LiCl pretreated hNT-DA neuronal grafts (100%). The number of THir neurons in these animals was low and not sufficient to produce significant
functional recovery
. In summary, this study has demonstrated that hNT neurons survive transplantation and express TH in the striatum and SN. Although hNT neurons are promising as an alternative to fetal tissue and may have potential clinical applications in the future, further improvements in enhancing TH expression are needed.
...
PMID:Intrastriatal and intranigral grafting of hNT neurons in the 6-OHDA rat model of Parkinson's disease. 1073 41
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