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Methamphetamine striatal neurons


Francesca Biagioni, Rosangela Feresea, Fiona Limanaqi, Michele Madonna, a Paola Lenzi, Stefano Gambardella, Francesco Fornaia


Brain Research


DESCRIPTION

Methamphetamine(Meth) produces a variety of epigenetic effects in the brain, which are seminal to establish long-lasting alterations in neuronal activity.

However, most radical changes were described by measuring the amount of either histone acetylation and methylation or direct DNA methylation, without focusing on a single DNA sequence.

This point is key to comprehend Methamphetamine-induced phenotypic changes, brain plasticity, addiction and neurodegeneration.

In this research we analyze the persistence of Meth-induced striatal synucleinopathy at a prolonged time interval of Meth withdrawal.

At the same time, Meth-induced alterations, specifically within alpha-synuclein gene (SNCA) or its promoter, were evaluated.

We found that exposure to high and/or prolonged doses of Meth, apart from producing nigro-striatal toxicity, determines a long-lasting increase in striatal alpha-synuclein levels.

This is consistent along immune-blotting, immune-histochemistry, and electron microscopy.

This was neither associated with an increase of SNCA copy number nor with alterations within SNCA sequence.

However, we documented persistently demethylation within SNCA promoter, which matches the increase in alpha-synuclein protein.

The amount of the native protein, which was measured stoichiometrically within striatal neurons, surpasses the increase reported following SNCA multiplications.

Demethylation was remarkable (ten-fold of controls) and steady, even at prolonged time intervals being tested so far (up to 21 days of Meth withdrawal).

Similarly alpha-synuclein protein assayed stoichiometrically steadily increased roughly ten-fold of controls. Meth-induced increase of alpha-synuclein was also described within limbic areas.

These findings are discussed in the light of Meth-induced epigenetic changes, Meth-induced phenotype alterations, and Meth-induced neurodegeneration.


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