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Published September 2018 | Accepted Version
Journal Article Open

Chronic nicotine improves cognitive and social impairment in mice overexpressing wild type α-synuclein

Abstract

In addition to dopaminergic and motor deficits, patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) suffer from non-motor symptoms, including early cognitive and social impairment, that do not respond well to dopaminergic therapy. Cholinergic deficits may contribute to these problems, but cholinesterase inhibitors have limited efficacy. Mice over-expressing α-synuclein, a protein critically associated with PD, show deficits in cognitive and social interaction tests, as well as a decrease in cortical acetylcholine. We have evaluated the effects of chronic administration of nicotine in mice over-expressing wild type human α-synuclein under the Thy1-promoter (Thy1-aSyn mice). Nicotine was administered subcutaneously by osmotic minipump for 6 months from 2 to 8 months of age at 0.4 mg/kg/h and 2.0 mg/kg/h. The higher dose was toxic in the Thy1-aSyn mice, but the low dose was well tolerated and both doses ameliorated cognitive impairment in Y-maze performance after 5 months of treatment. In a separate cohort of Thy1-aSyn mice, nicotine was administered at the lower dose for one month beginning at 5 months of age. This treatment partially eliminated the cognitive deficit in novel object recognition and social impairment. In contrast, chronic nicotine did not improve motor deficits after 2, 4 or 6 months of treatment, nor modified α-synuclein aggregation, tyrosine hydroxylase immunostaining, synaptic and dendritic markers, or microglial activation in Thy1-aSyn mice. These results suggest that cognitive and social impairment in synucleinopathies like PD may result from deficits in cholinergic neurotransmission and may benefit from chronic administration of nicotinic agonists.

Additional Information

© 2018 Elsevier Inc. Received 19 March 2018, Revised 7 May 2018, Accepted 29 May 2018, Available online 1 June 2018. This work was supported by the Michael J. Fox Foundation (MJFF) Target Validation, 2011, by the Caltech-UCLA Joint Center for Translational Medicine (JCTM, UCLA-CALTECH-77857), by NIH grant AG-033954, by gifts to the Center for the Study of Parkinson's disease at UCLA, and by gifts from Louis and Janet Fletcher at Caltech. We thank Dr. Franziska Richter and Sheri McKinney for help in designing the study. We also thank undergraduate students Bansi Patel, Jacky Kwong, Sean Campeau and Diana Dinh for their help with behavior rating and histology. MFC has received honoraria (for service as a reviewer) and travel reimbursement from MJFF. The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

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August 21, 2023
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