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Synergistic dopaminergic neurotoxicity of manganese and lipopolysaccharide: differential involvement of microglia and astroglia
Author(s) -
Zhang Ping,
Lokuta Kyle M.,
Turner DeAnne E.,
Liu Bin
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
journal of neurochemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.75
H-Index - 229
eISSN - 1471-4159
pISSN - 0022-3042
DOI - 10.1111/j.1471-4159.2009.06477.x
Subject(s) - neurotoxicity , microglia , dopaminergic , chemistry , neuroinflammation , lipopolysaccharide , nitric oxide , dopamine , pathogenesis , inflammation , neuroscience , biology , immunology , toxicity , organic chemistry
Overexposure to manganese is known to cause damage to basal ganglial neurons and the development of movement abnormalities. Activation of microglia and astrocytes has increasingly been associated with the pathogenesis of a variety of neurological disorders. We have recently shown that microglial activation facilitates manganese chloride (MnCl 2 , 10–300 μM)‐induced preferential degeneration of dopamine (DA) neurons. In this study, we report that combinations of MnCl 2 (1–30 μM) and endotoxin lipopolysaccharide (LPS, 0.5–2 ng/mL), at minimally effective concentrations when used alone, induced synergistic and preferential damage to DA neurons in rat primary neuron‐glia cultures. Mechanistically, MnCl 2 significantly potentiated LPS‐induced release of tumor necrosis factor‐alpha and interleukin‐1 beta in microglia, but not in astroglia. MnCl 2 and LPS were more effective in inducing the formation of reactive oxygen species and nitric oxide in microglia than in astroglia. Furthermore, MnCl 2 and LPS‐induced free radical generation, cytokine release, and DA neurotoxicity was significantly attenuated by pre‐treatment with potential anti‐inflammatory agents minocycline and naloxone. These results demonstrate that the combination of manganese overexposure and neuroinflammation is preferentially deleterious to DA neurons. Moreover, these findings not only shed light on the understanding of manganese neurotoxicity but may also bear relevance to the potentially multifactorial etiology of Parkinson’s disease.