Dopamine Neuron Agenesis in Nurr1-Deficient Mice

Rolf Zetterström(National Institute on Drug Abuse), Ludmila Solomin(National Institute on Drug Abuse), Lottie Jansson(National Institute on Drug Abuse), Barry J. Hoffer(National Institute on Drug Abuse), Lars Olson(National Institute on Drug Abuse), Thomas Perlmann(National Institute on Drug Abuse)
Science
April 11, 1997
Cited by 1,099

Abstract

Dopamine neurons of the substantia nigra and ventral tegmental area regulate movement and affective behavior and degenerate in Parkinson's disease. The orphan nuclear receptor Nurr1 was shown to be expressed in developing dopamine neurons before the appearance of known phenotypic markers for these cells. Mice lacking Nurr1 failed to generate midbrain dopaminergic neurons, were hypoactive, and died soon after birth. Nurr1 expression continued into adulthood, and brains of heterozygous animals, otherwise apparently healthy, contained reduced dopamine levels. These results suggest that putative Nurr1 ligands may be useful for treatment of Parkinson's disease and other disorders of midbrain dopamine circuitry.


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