The rotational model and microdialysis: Significance for dopamine signalling, clinical studies, and beyond
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Herrera-Marschitz Muller, Mario
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The rotational model and microdialysis: Significance for dopamine signalling, clinical studies, and beyond
Abstract
The detailed anatomy of the monoamine pathways of the rat by the students of Nils-A˚ ke Hillarp provided
the basis for a neurocircuitry targeting pharmacology. Further progress was achieved by the introduction
of 6-hydroxydopamine as a tool for performing specific lesions, leading to the first stereotaxic mapping
of the monoamine pathways in the rat brain by Urban Ungerstedt at the Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm,
Sweden. Unilateral intracerebral injections with 6-hydroxydopamine led to the proposal of ‘Rotational
Behaviour’, as a classical model for screening drugs useful for alleviating Parkinson’s disease and other
neuropathologies. The direction of the rotational behaviour induced by drugs administrated to lesioned
rats reveals their mechanisms of action on dopamine synapses, as demonstrated when rotational
behaviour was combined with microdialysis. The model was useful for proposing a role of dopamine
receptors in the gating of the flow of information through different efferent pathways of the basal
ganglia. It is established now that the coupling of dopamine receptors is regulated by a number of
proteins acting as GTPases, the regulators of G-protein signalling (RGS) family. More than 20 RGS
proteins have been identified, organised into subfamilies based on structural features and specificity for
different G-protein subunits. These protein subfamilies represent alternative pathways gating the flow
of information generated in the basal ganglia.
Microdialysis has been developed as a general tool for studying tissue and organ chemistry, leading to
a truly translational venture as microdialysis is brought into clinical use, monitoring energy metabolism
following global or focal ischemia in the neurosurgery and general medicine scenario.
Patrocinador
This study was supported by the Swedish Medical Research
Council (No. K2001-04X-08669-13B; 03574), FONDECYT-Chile
(No. 108-0447), The Welcome Trust, UK, and CMA Microdialysis
AB, Stockholm, Sweden.
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URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/128588
DOI: doi:10.1016/j.pneurobio.2009.01.005
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Progress in Neurobiology 90 (2010) 176–189
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