Ciesielska Agnieszka, Samaranch Lluis, San Sebastian Waldy, Dickson Dennis W, Goldman Samuel, Forsayeth John, Bankiewicz Krystof S
Department of Neurological Surgery, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, United States of America.
Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville, FL, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2017 Feb 6;12(2):e0169965. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0169965. eCollection 2017.
In Parkinson's disease (PD), aromatic L-amino acid decarboxylase (AADC) is the rate-limiting enzyme in the conversion of L-DOPA (Sinemet) to dopamine (DA). Previous studies in PD animal models demonstrated that lesion of dopaminergic neurons is associated with profound loss of AADC activity in the striatum, blocking efficient conversion of L-DOPA to DA. Relatively few studies have directly analyzed AADC in PD brains. Thus, the aim of this study was to gain a better understanding of regional changes in AADC activity, DA, serotonin and their monoamine metabolites in the striatum of PD patients and experimentally lesioned animals (rat and MPTP-treated nonhuman primate, NHP). Striatal AADC activity was determined post mortem in neuropathologically confirmed PD subjects, animal models and controls. A regional analysis was performed for striatal AADC activity and monoamine levels in NHP tissue. Interestingly, analysis of putaminal AADC activity revealed that control human striatum contained much less AADC activity than rat and NHP striata. Moreover, a dramatic loss of AADC activity in PD striatum compared to controls was detected. In MPTP-treated NHP, caudate nucleus was almost as greatly affected as putamen, although mean DA turnover was higher in caudate nucleus. Similarly, DA and DA metabolites were dramatically reduced in different regions of PD brains, including caudate nucleus, whereas serotonin was relatively spared. After L-DOPA administration in MPTP-treated NHP, very poor conversion to DA was detected, suggesting that AADC in NHP nigrostriatal fibers is mainly responsible for L-DOPA to DA conversion. These data support further the rationale behind viral gene therapy with AAV2-hAADC to restore AADC levels in putamen and suggest further the advisability of expanding vector delivery to include coverage of anterior putamen and the caudate nucleus.
在帕金森病(PD)中,芳香族L-氨基酸脱羧酶(AADC)是左旋多巴(息宁)转化为多巴胺(DA)过程中的限速酶。先前在PD动物模型中的研究表明,多巴胺能神经元损伤与纹状体中AADC活性的显著丧失有关,从而阻碍了左旋多巴向DA的有效转化。相对较少的研究直接分析了PD患者大脑中的AADC。因此,本研究的目的是更好地了解PD患者以及实验性损伤动物(大鼠和MPTP处理的非人类灵长类动物,NHP)纹状体中AADC活性、DA、5-羟色胺及其单胺代谢产物的区域变化。在经神经病理学证实的PD受试者、动物模型和对照中,死后测定纹状体AADC活性。对NHP组织中的纹状体AADC活性和单胺水平进行了区域分析。有趣的是,对壳核AADC活性的分析显示,对照人类纹状体中的AADC活性比大鼠和NHP纹状体中的要少得多。此外,与对照相比,检测到PD纹状体中AADC活性显著丧失。在MPTP处理的NHP中,尾状核受影响的程度几乎与壳核一样大,尽管尾状核中的平均DA周转率更高。同样,PD大脑不同区域(包括尾状核)中的DA和DA代谢产物显著减少,而5-羟色胺相对未受影响。在MPTP处理的NHP中给予左旋多巴后,检测到向DA的转化率非常低,这表明NHP黑质纹状体纤维中的AADC主要负责左旋多巴向DA的转化。这些数据进一步支持了用AAV2-hAADC进行病毒基因治疗以恢复壳核中AADC水平的理论依据,并进一步表明将载体递送范围扩大到包括前壳核和尾状核的覆盖范围是可取的。