Sriram K, Benkovic S A, Miller D B, O'Callaghan J P
HELD/TMBB, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Mailstop L-3014, 1095 Willowdale Road, Morgantown, WV 26505, USA.
Neuroscience. 2002;115(4):1335-46. doi: 10.1016/s0306-4522(02)00306-8.
Obesity is a major risk factor associated with a variety of human disorders. While its involvement in disorders such as diabetes, coronary heart disease and cancer have been well characterized, it remains to be determined if obesity has a detrimental effect on the nervous system. To address this issue we determined whether obesity serves as a risk factor for neurotoxicity. Model neurotoxicants, methamphetamine (METH) and kainic acid (KA), which are known to cause selective neurodegeneration of anatomically distinct areas of the brain, were evaluated using an animal model of obesity, the ob/ob mouse. Administration of METH and KA resulted in mortality among ob/ob mice but not among their lean littermates. While METH caused dopaminergic nerve terminal degeneration as indicated by decreased striatal dopamine (49%) and tyrosine hydroxylase protein (68%), as well as an increase in glial fibrillary acidic protein by 313% in the lean mice, these effects were exacerbated under the obese condition (96%, 86% and 602%, respectively). Similarly, a dosage of KA that did not increase glial fibrillary acidic protein in lean mice increased the hippocampal content of this protein (93%) in ob/ob mice. KA treatment resulted in extensive neuronal degeneration as determined by Fluoro-Jade B staining, decreased hippocampal microtubule-associated protein-2 immunoreactivity and increased reactive gliosis in ob/ob mice. The neurotoxic outcome in ob/ob mice remained exacerbated even when lean and ob/ob mice were dosed with METH or KA based only on a lean body mass. Administration of METH or KA resulted in up-regulation of the mitochondrial uncoupling protein-2 to a greater extent in the ob/ob mice, an effect known to reduce ATP yield and facilitate oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction. These events may underlie the enhanced neurotoxicity seen in the obese mice. In summary, our results implicate obesity as a risk factor associated with chemical- and possibly disease-induced neurodegeneration.
肥胖是与多种人类疾病相关的主要风险因素。虽然其在糖尿病、冠心病和癌症等疾病中的作用已得到充分表征,但肥胖是否对神经系统有不利影响仍有待确定。为了解决这个问题,我们确定肥胖是否是神经毒性的风险因素。使用肥胖动物模型ob/ob小鼠评估了已知会导致大脑不同解剖区域选择性神经变性的模型神经毒物甲基苯丙胺(METH)和 kainic 酸(KA)。给予METH和KA导致ob/ob小鼠死亡,但它们的瘦同窝小鼠未死亡。虽然METH导致瘦小鼠纹状体多巴胺减少(49%)和酪氨酸羟化酶蛋白减少(68%),表明多巴胺能神经末梢变性,同时胶质纤维酸性蛋白增加313%,但在肥胖条件下这些影响会加剧(分别为96%、86%和602%)。同样,在瘦小鼠中未增加胶质纤维酸性蛋白的KA剂量在ob/ob小鼠中增加了该蛋白的海马含量(93%)。通过Fluoro-Jade B染色确定,KA处理导致ob/ob小鼠广泛的神经元变性,海马微管相关蛋白-2免疫反应性降低,反应性胶质增生增加。即使仅根据瘦体重给瘦小鼠和ob/ob小鼠注射METH或KA,ob/ob小鼠的神经毒性结果仍然加剧。给予METH或KA导致ob/ob小鼠中线粒体解偶联蛋白-2的上调程度更大,已知这种作用会降低ATP产量并促进氧化应激和线粒体功能障碍。这些事件可能是肥胖小鼠中神经毒性增强的基础。总之,我们的结果表明肥胖是与化学物质和可能由疾病引起的神经变性相关的风险因素。