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Published August 11, 2004 | public
Journal Article

Knockin mice with Leu9′Ser α4-nicotinic receptors: substantia nigra dopaminergic neurons are hypersensitive to agonist and lost postnatally

Abstract

This study analyzes the electrophysiological cause and behavioral consequence of dopaminergic cell loss in a knockin mouse strain bearing hypersensitive nicotinic α4-receptor subunits ("L9′S mice"). Adult brains of L9′S mice show moderate loss of substantia nigra dopaminergic neurons and of striatal dopaminergic innervation. Amphetamine-stimulated locomotion is impaired, reflecting a reduction of dopamine stored in presynaptic vesicles. Recordings from dopaminergic neurons in L9′S mice show that 10 μM nicotine depolarizes cells and increases spiking rates in L9′S cells but hyperpolarizes and decreases spiking rates in wild-type (WT) cells. Thus dopaminergic neurons of L9′S mice have an excitatory response to nicotine which is qualitatively different from that of WT neurons. The cause of dopaminergic cell death is therefore probably an increased sensitivity to acetylcholine or choline of α4-containing nicotinic receptors. Hypersensitive excitatory stimulation during activation of α4-containing receptors provides the first evidence for cholinergic excitotoxicity as a cause of dopaminergic neuron death. This novel concept may be relevant to the pathophysiology of Parkinson disease.

Additional Information

© 2004 the American Physiological Society. Submitted 16 January 2004; accepted in final form 7 June 2004. This work was supported by German Research Foundation Grant DFG 704/3-1, the Tobacco Related Disease Research Project of California, NS-11756 and MH-49176, and a National Research Service Award (to C. Fonck). We thank Annett Brandt, Purnima Deshpande, and Ute Roemuss for technical assistance.

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 20, 2023