Stereotaxical Infusion of Rotenone: A Reliable Rodent Model for Parkinson's Disease

Nian Xiong(Huazhong University of Science and Technology), Jinsha Huang(Huazhong University of Science and Technology), Zhentao Zhang(Union Hospital), Zhaowen Zhang(Union Hospital), Jing Xiong(Union Hospital), Xingyuan Liu(Union Hospital), Min Jia(Union Hospital), Fang Wang(Union Hospital), Chunnuan Chen(Union Hospital), Xuebing Cao(Union Hospital), Zhihou Liang(Union Hospital), Shenggang Sun(Huazhong University of Science and Technology), Zhicheng Lin(Harvard University), Tao Wang(Huazhong University of Science and Technology)
PLoS ONE
November 17, 2009
Cited by 123Open Access
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Abstract

A clinically-related animal model of Parkinson's disease (PD) may enable the elucidation of the etiology of the disease and assist the development of medications. However, none of the current neurotoxin-based models recapitulates the main clinical features of the disease or the pathological hallmarks, such as dopamine (DA) neuron specificity of degeneration and Lewy body formation, which limits the use of these models in PD research. To overcome these limitations, we developed a rat model by stereotaxically (ST) infusing small doses of the mitochondrial complex-I inhibitor, rotenone, into two brain sites: the right ventral tegmental area and the substantia nigra. Four weeks after ST rotenone administration, tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) immunoreactivity in the infusion side decreased by 43.7%, in contrast to a 75.8% decrease observed in rats treated systemically with rotenone (SYS). The rotenone infusion also reduced the DA content, the glutathione and superoxide dismutase activities, and induced alpha-synuclein expression, when compared to the contralateral side. This ST model displays neither peripheral toxicity or mortality and has a high success rate. This rotenone-based ST model thus recapitulates the slow and specific loss of DA neurons and better mimics the clinical features of idiopathic PD, representing a reliable and more clinically-related model for PD research.


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