Gluck M R, Moy L Y, Jayatilleke E, Hogan K A, Manzino L, Sonsalla P K
Department of Neurology, Bronx Veterans Medical CenterBronx, New York, USA.
J Neurochem. 2001 Oct;79(1):152-60. doi: 10.1046/j.1471-4159.2001.00549.x.
The neurotoxic actions of methamphetamine (METH) may be mediated in part by reactive oxygen species (ROS). Methamphetamine administration leads to increases in ROS formation and lipid peroxidation in rodent brain; however, the extent to which proteins may be modified or whether affected brain regions exhibit similar elevations of lipid and protein oxidative markers have not been investigated. In this study we measured concentrations of TBARs, protein carbonyls and monoamines in various mouse brain regions at 4 h and 24 h after the last of four injections of METH (10 mg/kg/injection q 2 h). Substantial increases in TBARs and protein carbonyls were observed in the striatum and hippocampus but not the frontal cortex nor the cerebellum of METH-treated mice. Furthermore, lipid and protein oxidative markers were highly correlated within each brain region. In the hippocampus and striatum elevations in oxidative markers were significantly greater at 24 h than at 4 h. Monoamine levels were maximally reduced within 4 h (striatal dopamine [DA] by 95% and serotonin [5-HT] in striatum, cortex and hippocampus by 60-90%). These decrements persisted for 7 days after METH, indicating effects reflective of nerve terminal damage. Interestingly, NE was only transiently depleted in the brain regions investigated (hippocampus and cortex), suggesting a pharmacological and non-toxic action of METH on the noradrenergic nerve terminals. This study provides the first evidence for concurrent formation of lipid and protein markers of oxidative stress in several brain regions of mice that are severely affected by large neurotoxic doses of METH. Moreover, the differential time course for monoamine depletion and the elevations in oxidative markers indicate that the source of oxidative stress is not derived directly from DA or 5HT oxidation.
甲基苯丙胺(METH)的神经毒性作用可能部分由活性氧(ROS)介导。给予甲基苯丙胺会导致啮齿动物大脑中ROS形成增加和脂质过氧化;然而,蛋白质可能被修饰的程度以及受影响的脑区是否表现出脂质和蛋白质氧化标志物的类似升高尚未得到研究。在本研究中,我们在末次注射METH(10mg/kg/注射,每2小时一次,共注射4次)后4小时和24小时测量了各种小鼠脑区中硫代巴比妥酸反应物(TBARs)、蛋白质羰基和单胺的浓度。在接受METH处理的小鼠的纹状体和海马体中观察到TBARs和蛋白质羰基显著增加,但额叶皮质和小脑中未观察到。此外,每个脑区内脂质和蛋白质氧化标志物高度相关。在海马体和纹状体中,氧化标志物在24小时时的升高显著大于4小时时。单胺水平在4小时内最大程度降低(纹状体多巴胺[DA]降低95%,纹状体、皮质和海马体中的血清素[5-HT]降低60 - 90%)。这些降低在METH处理后持续7天,表明反映神经末梢损伤的效应。有趣的是,去甲肾上腺素(NE)在所研究的脑区(海马体和皮质)中仅短暂减少,表明METH对去甲肾上腺素能神经末梢具有药理学而非毒性作用。本研究首次证明了在受大剂量神经毒性METH严重影响的小鼠的几个脑区中同时形成氧化应激的脂质和蛋白质标志物。此外,单胺耗竭和氧化标志物升高的不同时间进程表明氧化应激的来源并非直接来自DA或5HT氧化。