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Apomorphine Induces Contralateral Rotation !1 Running Head: APOMORPHINE INDUCES CONTRALATERAL ROTATION Apomorphine Induces Contralateral Rotation in Rats with Unilateral 6-hydroxydopamine Lesions of the Substantia Nigra Andrew Peterson Davidson College, Davidson, NC Word Count: Abstract- 119 words Introduction- 486 words Discussion- 994 words In partial fulfillment of the requirements for PSY303 Dr. Julio Ramirez 12/11/2015 Apomorphine Induces Contralateral Rotation !2 Abstract Parkinson’s disease (PD) is characterized by a loss of dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra (SN), resulting in alterations in activity of the basal ganglia, which is responsible for the motor deficits associated with PD. Lesions of the nigrostriatal pathway with 6hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) have been used as successful models for PD; one characteristic of this model is rotational behavior either towards or away from the lesioned side depending on the dopamine agonist administered. We used the rotational behavior of this model to determine the identity of a mystery substance administered to rats lesioned in the nigrostriatal pathway with 6OHDA. Injection of the “mystery substance” resulted in vigorous contralateral rotations; identifying the unknown dopamine agonist as apomorphine. Apomorphine Induces Contralateral Rotation !3 “Mystery Substance” Induces Contralateral Rotation in Rats with Unilateral Lesions of the Substantia Nigra Using 6-hydroxydopamine Parkinson’s disease (PD) is the most common neurodegenerative movement disorder; affecting more than 0.1% of the population older than 40 years of age (Dawson & Dawson, 2003). Patients present with slowness of movement, rest tremors, rigidity, balance issues, and some also suffer from anxiety, depression, autonomic disturbances, and dementia (Wichmann, Vitek, & DeLong, 1995). Neurologically PD is characterized by the loss of nigrostriatal dopaminergic neurons and the presence of “Lewy Bodies” (LBs) in various types of neurons. Animal models for PD are used to mimic the dopaminergic cell loss and the behavioral deficits seen in human PD patients. 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) was one of the first agents used in PD models to destroy dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra (SN) (Deumans et al., 2002, Beal, 2001). After 6-OHDA is injected into the SN, it selectively accumulates in the dopaminergic neurons, killing them by damaging the mitochondria and allowing toxic ⍺synuclein to accumulate, and it has minimal negative effects on the nearby GABA neurons. This is the same damage that is seen in human PD patients (Wichmann, Vitek, & DeLong, 1995; Zeevalk et al., 1996). Bilateral and unilateral lesions have been done on this model. While bilateral lesions are more representative of the conditions seen in human PD patients, unilateral lesions offer up unique experimental opportunities (Ungerstedt, 1971a,b). Unilateral lesions with 6-OHDA allow one hemisphere to serve as an internal control and it offers the opportunity to study drug-induced changes in DA availability (Beal, 2001). The direction of rotational behavior induced by the Apomorphine Induces Contralateral Rotation 4! administration of drugs in rats with unilateral lesions of the SN corresponds to their mechanisms of action at the dopaminergic synapsis (Betarbet et atl, 2002; Casas et al., 1988). When dopamine concentrations are increased in the synaptic cleft, ipsilateral turning is demonstrated. Stimulation of supersensitive dopaminergic receptors in the denervated-striatum induces contralateral rotational behavior (Herrera-Marschitz, 1986). Apomorphine and amphetamine are two commonly used drugs to induce rotation in this model. Ungerstedt (1971a,b) used both in his unilateral 6-OHDA lesioned rats and found that amphetamine causes DA to be released from undamaged neurons and apomorphine produces activity in DA receptors primarily on the lesion side. Overall, he demonstrated that tats will turn toward the side with the least amount of dopamine activity. When challenged with dopamine agonists, the specific rotational behavior of this model can help determine the neurological effects of the agonist on the synapse. This experiment used rotational behavior to determine the identity of a “mystery substance,” either apomorphine or d-amphetamine, injected into rats with unilateral 6-OHDA lesions of the SN. The model initially described by Ungerstedt has been repeatedly tested and will allow us to accurately predicting the identity of the mystery substance based on the rotational behavior observed. If contralateral rotation is exhibited after surgery, the identity of the mystery substance is apomorphine; if ipsilateral rotational behavior is observed, it is damphetamine. Methods Subject Subjects included 18 male Sprague-Dawley rats (Hilltop Lab Animals, Scottsdale, PA) that initially weighed between 325-375 grams. The rats were individually stored in the animal Apomorphine Induces Contralateral Rotation !5 facility in 45cm x 24cm x 21cm wire cages with ad libitum access to dry food and water at all times until deprivation 24 hours before the surgery. All rats were given regular and identical enrichment throughout the experiment. If the weight of a rat dropped below the target weight, “wetmash” was provided. The rat colony was on a 12 hour light/dark cycle (7:00 am on, 7:00 pm off), and the temperature of the colony remained at a constant 21.1 ± 1.1℃. The experiment conformed to guidelines set by the National Institute of Health and approved by the Davidson College Animal Care and Use Committee. Apparatus Behavioral testing was done in a Roto-Rat Test Station (Columbus Instruments, Columbus, OH) connected to a Dell- Optiplex Gx620 computer with an Intel processor running the SOF-801 Roto-Rat System version 2.02 made by Med. Associates, Inc. The metal bowl has a diameter of 46.5 cm, a depth of 15.1 cm. The plexiglass cylinder on top of the metal bowl had a height of 29.4 cm. A velcro harness is attached to a long metal crossbar at the top of the plexiglass wall by a 37.9 cm flexible steel wire. The apparatus detects partial (180º) and complete (360º) clockwise (ipsiversive) and counterclockwise (contraversive) rotations through this steel wire. Design This study followed a pre/post design. The rats underwent seven days of pre-operational testing one week prior to their surgery and seven days of post-operational testing two weeks after surgery. The independent variable in this experiment is the “mystery substance”, either apomorphine or d-amphetamine, given to stimulate dopaminergic synapses and induce rotational behavior. The dependent variable was the direction of the rotational behavior, either ipsiversive Apomorphine Induces Contralateral Rotation !6 or contraversive, induced in the rats following injection of the mystery substance. In this experiment, the independent variable (the identity of the mystery substance) was the same for all test subjects. Only one test group was used in this experiment; all subjects went through the pre/ post behavioral testing and received injections of the mystery substance. The unilateral lesions served as an internal control for this experiment and allowed us to determine the identity of the mystery substance. Procedure Behavioral Testing: Seven days before the beginning of behavioral testing, approximately three weeks before surgery, rats were handled daily for at least 10 minutes to accustom them to human contact and handling. Pre-surgery behavioral testing began seven days before the 6OHDA lesion surgery; rats were given intraperitoneal injections of 0.5 ml/kg of the mystery substance. After at least 10 minutes, each rats rotational behavior was recorded in the Roto-Rat Test Station over a 10 minute period. Post-surgery behavioral testing was conducted following the same procedure as presurgical testing for a period of seven days exactly two weeks after surgery. Surgery: Surgical lesioning of the right SN with 6-OHDA was performed on all 18 subjects. The rats were anesthetized with an intraperitoneal injection of Ketamine (1 ml/kg) and Xylazine (0.4 ml/kg). Intraperitoneal injections of supplemental anesthesia were given throughout surgery if necessary: half of the original ketamine injection and 0.07ml Xylazine. An incision was made above the target area, and measurements were taken relative to bregma according to the rat’s weight (anterior/posterior: <300g, -3.0mm; 300-400g, -3.2mm; >400g, -3.5mm; medial lateral: -1.8mm). After the injection site is determined, a craniotomy is done Apomorphine Induces Contralateral Rotation !7 and a 5µl Hamilton syringe is lowered relative to the dura and according to weight (<200g, -8.2mm; 200-300g, -8.3mm; >300g, -8.4mm). We allowed the cannula to sit in the brain for 2 minutes before injecting 4.0µl of 6-OHDA (2µg/ml 6-OHDA in 0.9% saline vehicle with 0.02% ascorbate, Sigma Chemical Co.) at a rate of approximately 0.5µl/min. After injection, the cannula remained in the brain for an additional 5 minutes to avoid unintended damage from displacement of brain matter before being slowly removed over a 1 minute period. Histology: Within 24 hours after post-surgical behavioral testing was completed, the rats were euthanized with an overdose of Ketamine (0.7-0.8 cc), xylazine (0.3-0.4 cc), and placed in a CO2 chamber before they were transcardially perfused with 10% neutral-buffered formalin. After perfusion, the rats were decapitated and the brains were removed for preservation in 10% neutral buffered formalin for three days then transferred to a sucrose formalin solution until slicing. A microtome (Scientific Instruments) was used to coronally slice the brain into 40µm thick sections. Slices were mounted on pre-soaked gelatin glass slides and stained with a cresol violet acetate stain in order to microscopically analyze the brain tissue for the extent of the lesion. Results Histology Analysis of the brain tissue of the rats that rotated demonstrated extensive destruction to the SN region. See Fig. 1 for a representation of a partial lesion of the SN with 6-OHDA that resulted in contraversive rotation. The area shaded in black in the lower right portion of the diagram is the 6-OHDA lesion, and the narrow shaded rectangle in the upper right denotes the cannula track. Analysis of brain tissue from the 6 non-rotating rats was revealed that the 6- Apomorphine Induces Contralateral Rotation !8 OHDA lesion was off-target and did not significantly damage the SN, which is why they did not exhibit the desired rotational behavior. These 6 non-rotating rats were excluded from statistical analysis because they did not have extensive enough lesions to serve as effective PD models and to identify the mystery substance. Rotational Behavioral Rotational behavior from the 12 subjects that rotated was averaged to generate a list of mean values for pre-surgery contraversive rotations (Pre-Contra), pre-surgery ipsiversive rotations (Pre-Ipsi), post-surgery contraversive rotations(Post-Contra), and post-surgery ipsiversive rotations(Post-Ipsi). A two-tailed, paired t-tests was performed on the data and a pvalue of 0.05 was considered significant. Figure 2 demonstrates rats did not significantly favor the contraversive or ipsiversive side before surgery (t(12) = 0.736, p = 0.477); on average, they did not complete many full contraversive (m = 0.514) or ipsiversive (m=0.609) rotations when injected with the mystery substance before surgery. After injection of the mystery substance, there was a significant difference between ipsiversive and contraversive rotation. Figure 3 indicates that post-surgery ipsiversive rotations were significantly lower than pre-surgery ipsiversive rotations (t(12) = 3.43, p = 0.00559); Figure 4 demonstrates that post-surgery contraversive rotations were significantly higher than pre-surgery contraversive rotations (t(12) = -4.47, p = 0.000954). Figure 5 shows there were significantly more contraversive rotations than ipsiversive rotations after surgery (t(12) = 4.484, p = 0.000926); in rats with a unilateral lesion of the SN, the mystery substance clearly produced vigorous contraversive rotation. Apomorphine Induces Contralateral Rotation !9 Discussion Injection of the mystery substance following 6-OHDA lesions of the SN significantly increased contraversive rotation, and there was no significant change seen in ipsiversive rotation. According to previous studies, vigorous contraversive rotations in rats following injection of a dopamine agonists in rats unilaterally lesioned with 6-OHDA is induced by apomorphine (Ungerstedt, 1971a,b). Destruction of the dopaminergic neurons in the SN lowers the amount of DA reaching the postsynaptic cells and stimulates the development of supersensitivity in DA receptors in the lesioned side (Ungerstedt, 1971b, 1975). Apomorphine is an agonist for the dopamine receptor while amphetamine increases the release dopamine from the synapse (Anden 1967); therefore, apomorphine will have the greatest effect in rats with supersensitive dopamine receptors on the lesioned side (Ungerstedt, 1976). Amphetamine, as a dopamine-releasing agent, would have the greatest effect in dopamine synapses with surviving dopaminergic neurons (Carman, 1991). However, since 6-OHDA selectively accumulates in the dopaminergic neurons, killing the neurons by damaging the mitochondria (Dawson & Dawson, 2003), only the dopamine neurons will be affected by this lesion, not the receptors in the striatum. Rats will turn away from the side of the brain with the most dopaminergic activity, so they contraversively rotate when injected with drugs that act as post-synaptic dopamine agonist, like amphetamine (Hefti, 1980). Apomorphine and D-amphetamine both produce rotational behavior in rat models unilaterally lesioned with 6-OHDA. Previous research indicates that the extent of the SN lesion influences the rotational behavior observed. Hudson and et al (1993) found animals with extensive lesions (>90% depletion of dopamine in the striatum) rotated substantially after Apomorphine Induces Contralateral Rotation !10 injections of apomorphine because supersensitivity of stratal postsynaptic receptors would develop. When less than 90% of the nigrostriatal neurons were destroyed, no contraversive rotation was observed because no supersensitivity of postsynaptic receptors had developed for a dopamine agonists like apomorphine to act upon (Hudson, 1993; Hefti, 1980). In contrast, amphetamine induced rotational behavior in animals when only 50% of neurons in the SN were destroyed (Hefti, 1980). Additionally, lesions that were depleted DA levels by 70-90% also rotated when challenged with d-amphetamine but not apomorphine. Therefore, we can be certain that all of rats included in the statistical analysis had extensive lesions of the SN because they rotated in response to apomorphine. It is possible that some of the rats that did not rotate would have rotated if given injections of amphetamine instead of apomorphine; their lesions of the SN may not extensive enough to induce contraversive rotation when challenged with apomorphine. This means that using apomorphine to select for successful lesions is limiting the analysis to subjects with nearly complete loss of the dopaminergic neurons. However, this is a problem when modeling PD because it is a progressive disease in humans, and testing on models that only reflect the later stages of the disease could inhibit the discovery of potential treatments. PD is a progressive disease in humans, and it is important to have animal models that can mimic the progressive stages of the disease. In order to develop these models, methods for detecting the extent of dopaminergic neuron loss are necessary (Sauer, 1994). Park et al (2015) tried to model the progressive stages of PD by injecting a mouse model with different concentrations of 6-OHDA into the right medial forebrain bundle. The four groups demonstrated significant changes motor function, dopaminergic cell loss in the SN, and neuronal firing rates in the striatum; thus mimicking each progressive stage of human PD because larger dosages that Apomorphine Induces Contralateral Rotation 1! 1 resulted in more extensive lesions resulted in more intense symptoms. These results demonstrate that different sizes of lesions can produce behaviors associated with PD, even if the model’s do not exhibit the expected rotational behavior. While this experiment yielded clear results that are supported by previous research, the design could have been easily improved if we had more time and resources. Using apomorphine induced rotation to determine which subjects to include in the statistical analysis means that only extensively lesioned models are being considered, which is only representative of late-stage PD. A more effective way determine which subjects to include in the statistical analysis would be to quantitatively assess the extent of the 6-OHDA lesion. Immunocytochemical analysis could be done to reveal the number of tyrosine hydroxylate-positive neurons in the lesioned area. When compared to the non-lesioned side, this would provide an quantitive means of assessing the extent of neuron destruction from the lesion (Anaya-Martinez et al. 2006). Additionally, including a control group that undergoes surgery and receives an injection of saline instead of 6OHDA would help determine if the turning behavior was a result of the lesioning rather than the surgery itself. However, many previous studies have included such a control, and their results reveal that injection of saline into the SN has a negligible behavioral and histological effect (Barneoud, 1995; Anaya-Martinez et al. 2006). The goal of this PD rat model is to gain a better understanding of Parkinson’s disease in the hopes that we can find a cure. Previous research has demonstrated that this model is continually being refined in order to better mirror the conditions seen in human PD patients. While there are some limitations to the model we used in the experiment for modeling the stages of PD, it does provide us an effective tool for identifying the “mystery substance.” Post-surgical Apomorphine Induces Contralateral Rotation 1! 2 rats exhibited contraversive rotational behavior when challenged with apomorphine, the mystery substance, because apomorphine is a dopamine receptor agonists. The development of supersensitive postsynaptic dopamine receptors in the lesioned side of the brain resulted in an unequal activation of the dopaminergic pathway when stimulated with apomorphine, which is behaviorally represented by contraversive rotation. These results are consists with previous findings and further demonstrate the damaging effects of dopaminergic loss in the SN. Hopefully continued study and refinement of this PD model will further increase our understanding of the neurological mechanisms underlying PD in humans. Apomorphine Induces Contralateral Rotation !13 References 1. Anden, N.E. (1967). Evidence for dopamine receptor stimulation by apomorphine. Journal of pharmacy and pharmacology, 344(9), 627-633. 2. Anaya-Martinez, V. et al (2006). Substantia nigra compacta neurons that innervate the reticular thalamic nucleus in the rat also project to striatum or globes pallidus: implications for abnormal motor behavior. Neuroscience, 143(2), 477-486. http://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroscience.2006.08.033 3. Barneoud, P. (1995). Effects of complete and partial lesions of the dopaminergic mesotelencephalic system on skilled forelimb use in the rat. Neuroscience, 67(4), 837-848. 4. Beal, M.F. (2001). Experimental models of Parkinson’s disease. Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 2(5), 325-332. http://doi.org/10.1038/35072550 5. Betarbet, R., Sherer, T.B., & Greenamyre, J.T. (2002). Animal models of Parkinson’s disease. Bioessays, 24(4), 308-218. http://doi.org/10.1002/bies.10067 6. Carman, L.S., Gage, F.H., Shults, C.W. (1991). Partial lesion of the substantia-nigra-relation between extent of lesion and rotational behavior. Brain Research, 553(2), 275-283. 7. Casas, M., Ferre, S., Cobos, A., Cadafalch, J., Grau, J.M., Jane, F. (1988). Comparison between apomorphine and amphetamine-induced rotational behavior in rats with a unilateral nigrostriatal pathway lesion. Neuropharmacology, 27(6), 657-659. http://doi.org/10.1016/0028-3908(88)90190-6 Apomorphine Induces Contralateral Rotation !14 8. Dauer, W., Przedborski, S. (2003). Parkinson’s Disease: Mechanisms and Models. Neuron, 39, 889-909. 9. Dawson, T.M. & Dawson, V.L. (2003). Molecular Pathways of Neurodegeneration in Parkinson’s Disease. Science, 302(5646), 819-822. http//doi.org/10.1126/science.1087753 10. Deumans, R., Blokland, A., & Prickaertz, J. (2002). Modeling Parkinson’s disease in rats: An evaluation of 6-OHDA lesions of the nigrostriatal pathway. Experimental Neurology, 175(2), 303-317. 11. Hefti, F., Melamed, E., & Wurtman, R.J. (1980). Partial lesions of the dopaminergic nigrostriatal system in rat-brain biochemical-characterization. Brain Research, 195(1), 123-137. http://doi.org/10.1016/0006-8993(80)90871-9 12. Herrera-Marschitz M. et al. (1986). Substance P and dynophinergic striato-nigral pathways of the rat functional biochemical and immunohistochemical studies. Neuroscience Letters Supplement, 26, S316. 13. Hudson, J.L. et al (1993). Correlation of apomorphine- and amphetamine-induced turning with nigrostriatal dopamine content in unilateral 6-hydroxydopamine lesioned rats. Brain Research, 626(1-2), 167-174. http://doi.org/10.1016/0006-8993(93)90576-9 14. Park, S.E. et al (2015). A time-course study of behavioral and electrophysiological characteristics in a mouse model of different stages of Parkinson’s disease using 6- Apomorphine Induces Contralateral Rotation !15 hydroxydopamine. Behavioral Brain Research, 284, 153-157. http://doi.org/10.1016/j.bbr.2015.02.019 15. Sauer, H. & Oertel, W.H. (1994). Progressive degeneration of the nigrostriatal dopamine neurons following intrastriatal terminal lesions with 6-hydroxydopamine: a combined retrograde tracing and immunocytochemical study in the rat. Neuroscience, 59(2), 401-415. 16. Ungerstedt, U. (1971a). Striatal dopamine release after amphetamine or nerve degeneration revealed by rotational behaviour. Acta physiological Scandinavia. Supplementum, 367, 49-68. 17. Ungerstedt, U. (1971b). Postsynaptic supersensitivity after 6-hydroxydopamine induced degeneration of the nigro-striatal dopamine system. Acts Physiologica Scandinavica, 367, 69-93. 18. Ungerstedt, U. et al. (1975). Dopaminergic supersensitivity in the striatum. Advances in neurology, 9, 57-65. 19. Ungerstedt, U. (1976). 6-hydroxydopamine-induced degeneration of the nigrostriatal dopamine pathway: the turning syndrome. Pharmacology & therapeutics. Part B: General & systematic pharmacology, 2(1), 37-40. 20. Wichmann, T., Vitek, J.L., & DeLong, M.R. (1995). Parkinson’s Disease and the Basal Ganglia: Lessions from the Laboratory and from Neurosurgery. The Neuroscientist, 1(4), 236-244. Apomorphine Induces Contralateral Rotation !16 21. Zeevalk, G.D. et al, (1996). In vivo vulnerability of dopamine neurons to inhibition of energy metabolism. European Journal of Pharmacology, 320(2-3), 111-119. http://doi.org/10.1016/S0014-2999(96)00892-8 Apomorphine Induces Contralateral Rotation !17 Figure Captions Figure 1. This diagram represents the location of a partial lesion of the substantia nigra of rat 326, who did rotate after surgery. The areas colored in black were destroyed by the lesion. The damaged regions in the lower right portion of the diagram are the 6-OHDA lesion. The damaged area in the upper right hemisphere represents part of the cannula track. Figure 2. Pre-Surgery Contraversive vs. Pre-Surgery Ipsiversive. Injection of the mystery substance before surgery did not result in a significant difference between the number of contraversive rotations and ipsiversive rotations (p = 0.479). The bars represent the number of rotations during a 10 minute session in the Roto-Count 8 System ± the standard error above the mean. Figure 3. Pre-Surgery Ipsiversive vs. Post-Surgery Ipsiversive. Injection of the mystery substance resulted in a significantly fewer ipsiversive rotations after surgery (p = 0.006). The bars represent the number of rotations during a 10 minute session in the Roto-Count 8 System ± standard error above the mean. Figure 4. Pre-Surgery Contraversive vs. Post-Surgery Contraversive. Injection of the mystery substance resulted a significant difference in the number of contraversive rotations before and after surgery (p = 0.001). The bars represent the number of rotations during a 10 minute session in the Roto-Count 8 System ± standard error above the mean. Figure 5. Post-Surgery Contraversive vs. Post-Surgery Ipsiversive. Injection of the mystery substance after surgery resulted in a significant difference in the number of contraversive and ipsiversive rotations (p = 0.001). The bars represent the number of rotations during a 10 minute session in the Roto-Count 8 System ± the standard error above the mean. Apomorphine Induces Contralateral Rotation !18 Figures Figure 1 Apomorphine Induces Contralateral Rotation !19 Figure 2 Apomorphine Induces Contralateral Rotation !20 Figure 3 Apomorphine Induces Contralateral Rotation !21 Figure 4 Apomorphine Induces Contralateral Rotation !22 Figure 5