Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Reduction in parvalbumin expression in the zona incerta after 6OHDA lesion in rats.
- Journal:
- Journal of neurocytology
- Year:
- 2005
- Authors:
- Heise, Claire E & Mitrofanis, John
- Affiliation:
- Department of Anatomy & Histology · Australia
- Species:
- rodent
Abstract
In an effort to understand better the neurochemical changes that occur in Parkinson disease, we have examined the expression patterns of the calcium-binding protein parvalbumin in the zona incerta in parkinsonian rats. Sprague-Dawley rats had small volumes of either saline (control) or 6 hydroxydopamine (6OHDA) injected into the medial forebrain bundle, the major tract carrying dopaminergic nigrostriatal axons. After various post-lesion survival periods, ranging from 2 hrs to 84 days, rats were perfused with formaldehyde and their brains processed for routine tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) or parvalbumin immunocytochemistry. In the 3 to 84 days post-lesion cases, there was an overall 50% reduction in the number of parvalbumin(+) cells in the zona incerta on the 6OHDA-lesioned side when compared to control. In the 2 hrs post-lesion cases, there was no substantial loss of parvalbumin(+) cells in the zona incerta after 6OHDA lesion, although in these cases (unlike the longer survival periods), there was limited loss of TH(+) cells in the midbrain on the lesion side. The loss of parvalbumin(+) cells from the zona incerta was due to a loss of antigen expression rather than a loss of the cells themselves, since the number of Nissl-stained cells in the zona incerta was similar on the control and 6OHDA-lesioned sides. In summary, our results indicate that a loss of the midbrain dopaminergic cells induces a major change in parvalbumin expression within the zona incerta. This change may have key functional and clinical implications.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16902763/