Foetal nigral cell suspension grafts influence dopamine release in the non-grafted side in the 6-hydroxydopamine rat model of Parkinson's disease: in vivo voltammetric data

1996 
The present study employed differential-pulse voltammetry to assess the influence of foetal ventral mesencephalic grafts on dopamine overflow in the contralateral caudate putamen of the 6-hydroxydopamine rat model of Parkinson's disease. The experimental design involved measurements of dopamine overflow in the grafted and contralateral striatum. Control measurements of dopamine overflow were performed in 6-hydroxydopamine-lesioned rats only and the caudate putamen of normal control rats. Cell suspensions of foetal rat ventral mesencephalic tissue were grafted into the dopamine-depleted caudate putamen of unilaterally 6-hydroxydopamine-lesioned rats. At 6 weeks, animals with functional, mature grafts (as assessed by amphetamine-amplified behavioural asymmetry), were pretreated with pargyline (75 mg/kg i.p.), and both striatal sides were monitored for dopamine overflow for 90 min following amphetamine sulphate administration (5 mg/kg i.p.). The time course of dopamine overflow inside the graft was similar to that in the contralateral caudate putamen of the same animal, the normal control animal and the contralateral caudate putamen of 6-hydroxydopamine-lesioned animals. However, in grafted animals the mean dopamine overflow detected in the contralateral caudate putamen was approximately 34% lower than the concentration of dopamine detected in the contralateral caudate putamen of 6-hydroxydopamine-lesioned control animals and approximately 39% lower than the concentration of dopamine detected in the caudate putamen of the normal control animal. There was no statistical difference in the concentration of amphetamine-induced dopamine overflow between the caudate putamen contralateral to the 6-hydroxydopamine lesion and the caudate putamen of the normal control animal. These data suggest that intrastriatal foetal ventral mesencephalic suspension grafts reduce amphetamine-induced dopamine release in the contralateral non-grafted caudate putamen.
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