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Neurodegenerative Disorders • Progressive loss of neurons • Progressive loss of synaptic connections – Parkinson’s Disease – Alzheimer’s Disease – Wilson’s Disease A Story………. • Barry Kidson: student and recreational drug user (1976) • Made MPPP (similar to opioid analgesic; meperidine or Demerol) • Injected burning sensation Motor impairment: unable to speak or move • Diagnosed as catatonic schizophrenic Antipsychotic drugs Parkinson’s Disease • Mainly affects > 60 years Tremors Rigidity Bradykinesia Hypokinesis Postural disturbances • Cognitive dysfunction • Dementia – Severe impairment of memory, abstract thinking and language Remember: DA is not only about movement Mesocortical DA pathway Mesolimbic DA pathway James Parkinson (1817); “shaking palsy” neuromelanin Substantia Nigra: Dopamine (DA) main transmitter • Immunohistochemical stain for tyrosine hydroxylase show loss of DA cells in Parkinson’s Disease (PD): > 80% • Also, in PD, severe decline of DA content in corpus striatum (caudate nucleus and putamen) termination of s.nigral axons [123I]altropane imaging • Binds to DA transporter • Concentrated in striatum high density of dopaminergic nerve terminals • Red = +++ • Yellow = ++ • Purple =+ Progressive damage to ascending DA system Parkinson’s • Symptoms appear once striatal DA levels 70-80% of normal • Beyond threshold, correlation between degree of damage to DA system and severity • Pharmacotherapies aimed at increasing DA availability, or stimulating DA receptors, reduce symptoms • Destruction of nigrostriatal DA pathway produces motor deficits as in PD DA plus………. • Hypokinesia most clearly related to DA loss • Rigidity/tremor relate to complex disturbances of ACh, NE, 5-HT, GABA • Cholinergic neurones in Striatum contain highest concentration of Ach, ChAT, AChE in brain • DA inhibits ACh release • ACh hyperactivity PD symptoms 6-OHDA (6-hydroxydopamine) Lesioning • Bilateral 6-OHDA show severe behavioural dysfunction Sensory neglect Motivational deficits Motor impairments Unilateral injection: postural asymmetry Leaning and turning towards damaged side of brain How does a loss of striatal DA produce profound behavioural disturbances? • Basal ganglia – subcortical system forms a “loop” with the cerebral cortex • Basal ganglia “gate” movement commands originating in motor cortex • DA projections to striatum helps keep gate open • Loss of DA activity impairs gate opening; difficult for individual to initiate and control voluntary movements Pharmacological intervention • Anti-psychotic agents (eg to treat schizophrenia) produce extrapyramidal side effects • Result from blockade of dopamine-2 receptors Hypodopaminergic state Parkinson’s also associated with hypodopaminergic state • DA replacement therapy • Administration of DA agonist • Administration of DA breakdown inhibitor Levodopa (L-DOPA) dihydroxyphenylalanine Oral: rapidly absorbed; 95% converted to dopamine in plasma 1-5% crosses BB barrier to CNS (DA cannot cross barrier) DOPA converted to DA mainly within presynaptic terminals of DA neurones in basal ganglia Always a problem • L-DOPA destroyed by GI and Liver enzyme…… • …..and converted to DA in peripheral circulation eg nausea • Need to reduce high levels of systemic DA while maintaining sufficient levels in brain • Dopa decarboxylase converts DOPA to DA • Selectively inhibit enzyme in systemic circulation (but not in brain) Carbidopa (Sinemet) • Active in body, but does not cross BBB: metabolic conversion occurs in CNS only • Used in combination with L-DOPA • Effective dose of L-DOPA 75% • Reduced side effects • No loss of CNS effects COMT (catechol-o-methyltransferase) inhibitors • COMT active in liver and GI tract • Half life of Sinemet increased by adding COMT inhibitor • Tolcapone (Tasmar) 1998 • Blocks COMT enzyme, increased half life of L-DOPA • Liver toxicity: withdrawn • Entacapone 2001 (Comtan) • Inhibits peripheral COMT, no effect on CNS COMT; inhibition of peripheral L-DOPA breakdown increases central L-DOPA (hence DA) Stalevo (2004) • Combination product Levodopa Carbidopa: increases DA in brain Entacapone: inhibits degradation of L-DOPA through inhibition of its degradative enzyme COMT • Combination provides more brain DA, for longer time periods: less “wearing off” Limitations of L-DOPA • Each dose becomes less effective • Increasing dose leads to movement disorders (dyskinesias) – cf rigidity, akinesia of PD) • May accelerate the cause of PD – ie ameliorating the symptoms may aggravate the disease Dopamine receptor agonists • Loss of response to L-DOPA • Progressive inability for neurones to synthesise and store DA • Receptor agonists postsynaptic DA receptors DA Agonists • Bromocryptine • Pergolide • Pramipexole • Ropinirole Marginally effective Bothersome side effects Drowsiness, dizziness, nausea, hallucinations, insomnia Selegiline • Monoamine oxidase MAO: 2 isoenzymes – MAO-A: NE and serotonin – MAO-B: DA (striatum) • Selegiline preferentially inhibits MAO-B (in doses < 10mg day-1) • Therefore preserves small amounts of DA present • Slows down progression of disease • Selegiline is metabolised to several by products (including amphetamine and methamphetamine) What about Barry Kidson? • Aimed to produce MPPP • Contaminant MPTP 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine • Neurotoxin – destroys DA neurons in substantia nigra: depletes striatal DA cf 6-OHDA • Behavioural syndrome similar to PD • Responds to treatment with L-DOPA Pharmacology of Alzheimer’s Disease • Some issues: – Definite diagnosis only made PM – Antemortem diagnosis 10-15% error – Syndrome – Changes in test scores may be significant statistically but clinically meaningless – Lack of evidence that drug treatment improves QOL for sufferers (or carers) AD not just associated with cognitive impairment……………………. • Depression: – treated with antidepressants that lack anticholinergic side effects (eg SSRIs • Treatment for apathy: – eg psychostimulants, buproprion (antidepressant), bromocryptine etc • Psychosis, agitation: – New (atypical) antipsychotic agents – Mood stabilizers, sedating antidepressant (trazodone) Cholinergic Hypothesis of Cortical Dysfunction • Centrally acting muscarinic blocking agents induces loss of recent memory • 80-90% loss of Ach in cerebral cortex and hippocamus of AD patients; decrease in ChAT, and choline uptake • In AD patients, loss of neurons in “nucleus basalis of Maynert” • In some AD studies, decrease in muscarinic and nicotinic receptors Ach central pathways Note: basal forebrain cholinergic system (BFCS) Acetyl choline precursors • Choline • Lecithin (phosphatidyl choline) • NO EFFECT • In symptomatic AD: too few presynaptic cholinergic neurons to have clinical effect Cholinesterase Inhibitors enhancement of cholinergic transmission • TACRINE • “Modest” improvement in test of memory and cognition in 40% of AD patients • No improvement in functional measures affecting QOL 4 times daily Cholinergic side effects – nausea, abdominal cramps, hepatotoxicity Some better ones……..? • Donezepil: not hepatotoxic • Rivastigmine: longer lasting; CNS selective; fewer peripheral side effects • Galanthamine: plant alkaloid (snowdrop family); two effects – Cholinesterase inhibitor – Activation of brain nicotinic Ach receptors Different approaches Glutamate receptor NMDA implicated in memory processes, dementia and pathogenesis of AD Excess glutamate – excitotoxicity MEMANTINE “Moderate affinity” non-competitive NMDA antagonist Reduces clinical deterioration in moderate to severe AD patients ACh and Glucose Metabolism Nootropics (smart drugs) Inhibiting Neurodegeneration • AD molecular targets becoming known • Transgenic animal models available • Schenk et al (1999) immunised AD transgenic mice with A protein Prevented plaque formation (and reversed it) • Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (eg indomethacin, ibuprofen) reduce likelihood of developing AD