Back to Search Start Over

Intranigral Administration of β-Sitosterol-β-D-Glucoside Elicits Neurotoxic A1 Astrocyte Reactivity and Chronic Neuroinflammation in the Rat Substantia Nigra

Authors :
Claudia Luna-Herrera
Irma A. Martínez-Dávila
Luis O. Soto-Rojas
Yazmin M. Flores-Martinez
Manuel A. Fernandez-Parrilla
Jose Ayala-Davila
Bertha A. León-Chavez
Guadalupe Soto-Rodriguez
Victor M. Blanco-Alvarez
Francisco E. Lopez-Salas
Maria E. Gutierrez-Castillo
Bismark Gatica-Garcia
America Padilla-Viveros
Cecilia Bañuelos
David Reyes-Corona
Armando J. Espadas-Alvarez
Linda Garcés-Ramírez
Oriana Hidalgo-Alegria
Fidel De La Cruz-lópez
Daniel Martinez-Fong
Source :
Journal of Immunology Research, Vol 2020 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Wiley, 2020.

Abstract

Chronic consumption of β-sitosterol-β-D-glucoside (BSSG), a neurotoxin contained in cycad seeds, leads to Parkinson’s disease in humans and rodents. Here, we explored whether a single intranigral administration of BSSG triggers neuroinflammation and neurotoxic A1 reactive astrocytes besides dopaminergic neurodegeneration. We injected 6 μg BSSG/1 μL DMSO or vehicle into the left substantia nigra and immunostained with antibodies against tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) together with markers of microglia (OX42), astrocytes (GFAP, S100β, C3), and leukocytes (CD45). We also measured nitric oxide (NO), lipid peroxidation (LPX), and proinflammatory cytokines (TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-6). The Evans blue assay was used to explore the blood-brain barrier (BBB) permeability. We found that BSSG activates NO production on days 15 and 30 and LPX on day 120. Throughout the study, high levels of TNF-α were present in BSSG-treated animals, whereas IL-1β was induced until day 60 and IL-6 until day 30. Immunoreactivity of activated microglia (899.0±80.20%) and reactive astrocytes (651.50±11.28%) progressively increased until day 30 and then decreased to remain 251.2±48.8% (microglia) and 91.02±39.8 (astrocytes) higher over controls on day 120. C3(+) cells were also GFAP and S100β immunoreactive, showing they were neurotoxic A1 reactive astrocytes. BBB remained permeable until day 15 when immune cell infiltration was maximum. TH immunoreactivity progressively declined, reaching 83.6±1.8% reduction on day 120. Our data show that BSSG acute administration causes chronic neuroinflammation mediated by activated microglia, neurotoxic A1 reactive astrocytes, and infiltrated immune cells. The severe neuroinflammation might trigger Parkinson’s disease in BSSG intoxication.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23148861 and 23147156
Volume :
2020
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Journal of Immunology Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.0474752dbbf74b6ebd4ef45a062623d7
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1155/2020/5907591