Parkin-deficient Mice Exhibit Nigrostriatal Deficits but Not Loss of Dopaminergic Neurons

Matthew S. Goldberg(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Sheila M. Fleming(University of California, Los Angeles), James Palacino(Harvard University), Carlos Cepeda(University of California, Los Angeles), Hoa A. Lam(University of California, Los Angeles), Anushree Bhatnagar(Case Western Reserve University), Edward G. Meloni(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Nanping Wu(University of California, Los Angeles), Larry C. Ackerson(Neurobehavioral Systems), Gloria J. Klapstein(University of California, Los Angeles), Mahadevan Gajendiran(University of California, Los Angeles), Bryan L. Roth(Case Western Reserve University), Marie-Françoise Chesselet(University of California, Los Angeles), Nigel T. Maidment(University of California, Los Angeles), Michael S. Levine(University of California, Los Angeles), Jie Shen(Harvard University)
Journal of Biological Chemistry
October 1, 2003
Cited by 911Open Access
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Abstract

Loss-of-function mutations in parkin are the major cause of early-onset familial Parkinson's disease. To investigate the pathogenic mechanism by which loss of parkin function causes Parkinson's disease, we generated a mouse model bearing a germline disruption in parkin. Parkin-/- mice are viable and exhibit grossly normal brain morphology. Quantitative in vivo microdialysis revealed an increase in extracellular dopamine concentration in the striatum of parkin-/- mice. Intracellular recordings of medium-sized striatal spiny neurons showed that greater currents are required to induce synaptic responses, suggesting a reduction in synaptic excitability in the absence of parkin. Furthermore, parkin-/- mice exhibit deficits in behavioral paradigms sensitive to dysfunction of the nigrostriatal pathway. The number of dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra of parkin-/- mice, however, is normal up to the age of 24 months, in contrast to the substantial loss of nigral neurons characteristic of Parkinson's disease. Steady-state levels of CDCrel-1, synphilin-1, and alpha-synuclein, which were identified previously as substrates of the E3 ubiquitin ligase activity of parkin, are unaltered in parkin-/- brains. Together these findings provide the first evidence for a novel role of parkin in dopamine regulation and nigrostriatal function, and a non-essential role of parkin in the survival of nigral neurons in mice.


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