Document detail
ID

oai:pubmedcentral.nih.gov:7222...

Topic
Research Article
Author
Taherianfard, Mahnaz Riyahi, Moslem Razavi, Mostafa Bavandi, Zahedeh Eskandari Roozbahani, Narges Namavari, Mohammad Mehdi
Langue
en
Editor

Hindawi

Category

BioMed Research International

Year

2020

listing date

12/14/2023

Keywords
dopamine parkinson disease induction test tg significantly control nociceptive rats pd
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Abstract

PURPOSE: Parkinson's disease (PD) is a neurodegenerative disorder with progressive motor defects.

Therefore, the aim of the present investigation was to examine whether catalepsy, asymmetry, and nociceptive behaviors; the Nissl-body and neuron distribution; brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF); malondialdehyde (MDA); total antioxidant capacity (TAC) levels; and the percentage of dopamine depletion of striatal neurons in the rat model of Parkinson's disease (PD) can be affected by Toxoplasma gondii (TG) infection.

METHODS: Fifty rats were divided into five groups: control (intact rats), sham (rats which received an intrastriatal injection of artificial cerebrospinal fluid (ACSF)), PD control (induction of PD without TG infection), TG control (rats infected by TG without PD induction), and PD infected (third week after PD induction, infection by TG was done).

PD was induced by the unilateral intrastriatal microinjection of 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) and ELISA quantified dopamine, BDNF, MDA, and TAC in the striatum tissue.

Cataleptic, asymmetrical, nociceptive, and histological alterations were determined by bar test, elevated body swing test, formalin test, and Nissl-body and neuron counting in the striatal neurons.

RESULTS: The results demonstrated that PD could significantly increase the number of biased swings, descent latency time, and nociceptive behavior and decrease the distribution of Nissl-stained neurons compared to the control and sham groups.

TG infection significantly improved biased swing, descent latency time, nociceptive behavior, and the Nissl-body distribution in striatal neurons in comparison to the PD control group.

The striatal level of BDNF in the PD-infected and TG control groups significantly increased relative to the PD control group.

The striatal MDA was significantly higher in the PD control than other groups, while striatal TAC was significantly lower in the PD control than other groups.

CONCLUSIONS: The current study indicates that TG infection could improve the cataleptic, asymmetric, nociceptive and behaviors; the level of striatal dopamine release; BDNF levels; TAC; and MDA in PD rats.

Taherianfard, Mahnaz,Riyahi, Moslem,Razavi, Mostafa,Bavandi, Zahedeh,Eskandari Roozbahani, Narges,Namavari, Mohammad Mehdi, 2020, The Cataleptic, Asymmetric, Analgesic, and Brain Biochemical Effects of Parkinson's Disease Can Be Affected by Toxoplasma gondii Infection, Hindawi

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