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Dopamine D2 and D3 receptor agonists limit oligodendrocyte injury caused by glutamate oxidative stress and oxygen/glucose deprivation

Version 2 2024-03-12, 20:44
Version 1 2023-10-19, 20:07
journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-12, 20:44 authored by Claudia Rosin, Sergio Colombo, Andrew A. Calver, Timothy Bates, Stephen D. Skaper
<p>Dopamine receptor activation is thought to contribute adversely to several neuropathological disorders, including Parkinson's disease and schizophrenia. In addition, dopamine may have a neuroprotective role: dopamine receptor agonists are reported to protect nerve cells by virtue of their antioxidant properties as well as by receptor-mediated mechanisms. White matter injury can also be a significant factor in neurological disorders. Using real-time RT-PCR, we show that differentiated rat cortical oligodendrocytes express dopamine D2 receptor and D3 receptor mRNA. Oligodendrocytes were vulnerable to oxidative glutamate toxicity and to oxygen/glucose deprivation injury. Agonists for dopamine D2 and D3 receptors provided significant protection of oligodendrocytes against these two forms of injury, and the protective effect was diminished by D2 and D3 antagonists. Levels of oligodendrocyte D2 receptor and D3 receptor protein, as measured by Western blotting, appeared to increase following combined oxygen and glucose deprivation. Our results suggest that dopamine D2 and D3 receptor activation may play an important role in oligodendrocyte protection against oxidative glutamate toxicity and oxygen-glucose deprivation injury.</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • Department of Life Sciences (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Glia

Volume

52

Issue

4

Pages/Article Number

336-343

Publisher

Wiley Liss

ISSN

0894-1491

eISSN

1098-1136

Date Submitted

2012-06-27

Date Accepted

2012-06-27

Date of First Publication

2012-06-27

Date of Final Publication

2012-06-27

ePrints ID

5229