Cells (Mar 2021)

Chronic–Progressive Dopaminergic Deficiency Does Not Induce Midbrain Neurogenesis

  • Mareike Fauser,
  • Francisco Pan-Montojo,
  • Christian Richter,
  • Philipp J. Kahle,
  • Sigrid C. Schwarz,
  • Johannes Schwarz,
  • Alexander Storch,
  • Andreas Hermann

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cells10040775
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 4
p. 775

Abstract

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Background: Consecutive adult neurogenesis is a well-known phenomenon in the ventricular–subventricular zone of the lateral wall of the lateral ventricles (V–SVZ) and has been controversially discussed in so-called “non-neurogenic” brain areas such as the periventricular regions (PVRs) of the aqueduct and the fourth ventricle. Dopamine is a known modulator of adult neural stem cell (aNSC) proliferation and dopaminergic neurogenesis in the olfactory bulb, though a possible interplay between local dopaminergic neurodegeneration and induction of aNSC proliferation in mid/hindbrain PVRs is currently enigmatic. Objective/Hypothesis: To analyze the influence of chronic–progressive dopaminergic neurodegeneration on both consecutive adult neurogenesis in the PVRs of the V–SVZ and mid/hindbrain aNSCs in two mechanistically different transgenic animal models of Parkinson´s disease (PD). Methods: We used Thy1-m[A30P]h α synuclein mice and Leu9′Ser hypersensitive α4* nAChR mice to assess the influence of midbrain dopaminergic neuronal loss on neurogenic activity in the PVRs of the V–SVZ, the aqueduct and the fourth ventricle. Results: In both animal models, overall proliferative activity in the V–SVZ was not altered, though the proportion of B2/activated B1 cells on all proliferating cells was reduced in the V–SVZ in Leu9′Ser hypersensitive α4* nAChR mice. Putative aNSCs in the mid/hindbrain PVRs are known to be quiescent in vivo in healthy controls, and dopaminergic deficiency did not induce proliferative activity in these regions in both disease models. Conclusions: Our data do not support an activation of endogenous aNSCs in mid/hindbrain PVRs after local dopaminergic neurodegeneration. Spontaneous endogenous regeneration of dopaminergic cell loss through resident aNSCs is therefore unlikely.

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