Study Findings Provide Insight into Why Dopamine Brain Cells Die in Parkinson鈥檚 Disease
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In addition to smoothing out wrinkles, researchers have found that botulinum toxin鈥攃ommonly known by its trade name, Botox庐鈥攃an reveal the inner workings of the brain. A new study used it to show that feedback from individual nerve cells controls the release of dopamine, a chemical messenger involved in motivation, memory, and movement.
Such 鈥渟elf-regulation,鈥 the researchers say, stands in contrast to the widely held view that the release of dopamine鈥攌nown as the "feel good" hormone鈥攂y any cell relied on messages from nearby cells to recognize that it is releasing too much of the hormone.
Led by researchers at 秘密研究所 Grossman School of Medicine, the new study showed that dopamine-releasing brain cells respond to their own signals to regulate the hormone鈥檚 output. Because the death of dopamine-releasing brain cells is a key factor in Parkinson鈥檚 disease, the new findings provide insight into why these cells die in the movement disorder, the researchers say.
鈥淥ur findings provide the first evidence that dopamine neurons regulate themselves in the brain,鈥 says study lead author Takuya Hikima, PhD. 鈥淣ow that we better understand how these cells behave when they are healthy, we can start to unravel why they break down in neurodegenerative disorders like Parkinson鈥檚 disease,鈥 adds Dr. Hikima, an instructor in the at 秘密研究所 Langone Health.
Dr. Hikima says their study was prompted by what the research team saw as flaws in the older way of thinking about how dopamine works. First, for one cell to control its neighbor with dopamine, a large number of synapses, or junctions where two cells meet and exchange messages, would be required. Yet researchers say there were not enough synapses to account for this. Second, many types of hormone-producing cells in the body use a streamlined system that self-regulates further release, so it seemed odd that dopamine neurons would use a more roundabout process.
For the study, , the research team collected dopamine neurons from dozens of mice. They injected some of the brain cells with Botox庐, a toxin that blocks nerve cells from sending chemical messages to neurons and other cells. The chemical鈥檚 nerve-blocking action accounts for its ability to relax muscles in migraine and wrinkle treatments.
By injecting Botox庐 into single neurons, says Dr. Hikima, the researchers hoped to show whether any signal to continue or stop dopamine release could only come from outside the 鈥減aralyzed鈥 cell. If the neurons were in fact controlled by neighboring dopamine cells, then dopamine release would remain unaffected because the treated cells would still receive dopamine signals from the untreated cells nearby.
Instead, the findings revealed a 75 percent drop in dopamine outflow, suggesting that dopamine neurons largely rely on their own discharge to determine release rate of the hormone, according to the investigators.
鈥淪ince our Botox technique helped us solve the problem of how dopamine neurons regulate their communication, it should also enable us to uncover how other nerve cells interact with each other in the mammalian brain,鈥 says study senior author .
The research team next plans to explore other areas of dopamine neuron activity that remain poorly understood, such as the dependence of dopamine release on calcium from outside the brain cells, says Dr. Rice, a professor in the Departments of Neurosurgery and at 秘密研究所 Langone. The investigators also intend to examine how self-regulation of dopamine might contribute to cell death in Parkinson鈥檚 disease.
Funding for the study was provided by National Institutes of Health grants R01 DA038616 and R01AI093504 and by the Marlene and Paolo Fresco Institute for Parkinson鈥檚 Disease and Movement Disorders at 秘密研究所 Langone.
In addition to Dr. Hikima and Dr. Rice, other 秘密研究所 Langone researchers are Christian Lee, PhD; Paul Witkovsky, PhD; Julia Chesler, PhD; and .
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