Prolonged exposure to manganese in mammals may cause an extrapyramidal disorder characterized by dystonia and rigidity. Gliosis in the pallidal segments underlies the well-established phase of the intoxication. The early phase of the intoxication may be characterized by psychic, nonmotor signs, and its morphological and electrophysiological correlates are less defined. In a rat model of manganese intoxication (20 mg/ml in drinking water for 3 months), neither neuronal loss nor gliosis was detected in globus pallidus (GP). However, a striking vulnerability of manganese-treated GP neurons emerged. The majority of GP neurons isolated from manganese-treated rats died following brief incubation in standard dissociation media. In addition, patch-clamp recordings in the whole-cell configuration were not tolerated by surviving GP neurons. Neither coeval but untreated GP neurons nor striatal ones manifested analogous susceptibility. Using the perforated-patch mode of recording we attempted at identifying the functional hallmarks of GP vulnerability: in particular, voltage-gated calcium currents and glutamate-induced currents were examined. Manganese-treated GP neurons exhibited calcium currents similar to control cells aside from a slight reduction in the dihydropyridine-sensitive current facilitation. Strikingly, manganese-treated GP cells--but not striatal ones--manifested peculiar responses to glutamate, since repeated applications of the excitatory amino acid, at concentrations which commonly promote desensitizing responses, produced instead an irreversible cell damage. Possible mechanisms are discussed.

Spadoni, F., Stefani, A., Morello, M., Lavaroni, F., Giacomini, P., Sancesario, G. (2000). Selective vulnerability of pallidal neurons in the early phases of manganese intoxication. EXPERIMENTAL BRAIN RESEARCH, 135(4), 544-551.

Selective vulnerability of pallidal neurons in the early phases of manganese intoxication

STEFANI, ALESSANDRO;MORELLO, MARIA;LAVARONI, FRANCO;SANCESARIO, GIUSEPPE
2000-12-01

Abstract

Prolonged exposure to manganese in mammals may cause an extrapyramidal disorder characterized by dystonia and rigidity. Gliosis in the pallidal segments underlies the well-established phase of the intoxication. The early phase of the intoxication may be characterized by psychic, nonmotor signs, and its morphological and electrophysiological correlates are less defined. In a rat model of manganese intoxication (20 mg/ml in drinking water for 3 months), neither neuronal loss nor gliosis was detected in globus pallidus (GP). However, a striking vulnerability of manganese-treated GP neurons emerged. The majority of GP neurons isolated from manganese-treated rats died following brief incubation in standard dissociation media. In addition, patch-clamp recordings in the whole-cell configuration were not tolerated by surviving GP neurons. Neither coeval but untreated GP neurons nor striatal ones manifested analogous susceptibility. Using the perforated-patch mode of recording we attempted at identifying the functional hallmarks of GP vulnerability: in particular, voltage-gated calcium currents and glutamate-induced currents were examined. Manganese-treated GP neurons exhibited calcium currents similar to control cells aside from a slight reduction in the dihydropyridine-sensitive current facilitation. Strikingly, manganese-treated GP cells--but not striatal ones--manifested peculiar responses to glutamate, since repeated applications of the excitatory amino acid, at concentrations which commonly promote desensitizing responses, produced instead an irreversible cell damage. Possible mechanisms are discussed.
dic-2000
Pubblicato
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
Settore MED/26 - NEUROLOGIA
English
Con Impact Factor ISI
Animals; Calcium; Glutamic Acid; Calcium Channels; Rats; Nerve Degeneration; Patch-Clamp Techniques; Manganese Poisoning; Neurons; Rats, Wistar; Parkinsonian Disorders; Globus Pallidus; Male
Spadoni, F., Stefani, A., Morello, M., Lavaroni, F., Giacomini, P., Sancesario, G. (2000). Selective vulnerability of pallidal neurons in the early phases of manganese intoxication. EXPERIMENTAL BRAIN RESEARCH, 135(4), 544-551.
Spadoni, F; Stefani, A; Morello, M; Lavaroni, F; Giacomini, P; Sancesario, G
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/69150
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