In neuronal circuits, memory storage depends on activity-dependent modifications in synaptic efficacy, such as LTD (long-term depression) and LTP (long-term potentiation), the two main forms of synaptic plasticity in the brain. In the nucleus striatum, LTD and LTP represent key cellular substrates for adaptive motor control and procedural memory. It has been suggested that their impairment could account for the onset and progression of motor symptoms of PD (Parkinson's disease), a neurodegenerative disorder characterized by the massive degeneration of dopaminergic neurons projecting to the striatum. In fact, a peculiar aspect of striatal plasticity is the modulation exerted by DA (dopamine) on LTP and LTD. Our understanding of these maladaptive forms of plasticity has mostly come from the electrophysiological, molecular and behavioural analyses of experimental animal models of PD. In PD, a host of cellular and synaptic changes occur in the striatum in response to the massive loss of DA innervation. Chronic L-dopa therapy restores physiological synaptic plasticity and behaviour in treated PD animals, but most of them, similarly to patients, exhibit a reduction in the efficacy of the drug and disabling AIMs (abnormal involuntary movements) defined, as a whole, as L-dopa-induced dyskinesia. In those animals experiencing AIMs, synaptic plasticity is altered and is paralleled by modifications in the postsynaptic compartment. In particular, dysfunctions in trafficking and subunit composition of NMDARs [NMDA (N-methyl-D-aspartate) receptors] on striatal efferent neurons result from chronic non-physiological dopaminergic stimulation and contribute to the pathogenesis of dyskinesias. According to these pathophysiological concepts, therapeutic strategies targeting signalling proteins coupled to NMDARs within striatal spiny neurons could represent new pharmaceutical interventions for PD and L-dopa-induced dyskinesia.
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April 2010
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Conference Article|
March 22 2010
Synaptic dysfunction in Parkinson's disease
Vincenza Bagetta;
Vincenza Bagetta
*Laboratorio di Neurofisiologia, Fondazione Santa Lucia, I.R.C.C.S., 00143 Rome, Italy
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Veronica Ghiglieri;
Veronica Ghiglieri
*Laboratorio di Neurofisiologia, Fondazione Santa Lucia, I.R.C.C.S., 00143 Rome, Italy
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Carmelo Sgobio;
Carmelo Sgobio
*Laboratorio di Neurofisiologia, Fondazione Santa Lucia, I.R.C.C.S., 00143 Rome, Italy
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Paolo Calabresi;
Paolo Calabresi
*Laboratorio di Neurofisiologia, Fondazione Santa Lucia, I.R.C.C.S., 00143 Rome, Italy
†Clinica Neurologica, Università di Perugia, Ospedale S. Maria della Misericordia, 06156 Perugia, Italy
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Barbara Picconi
Barbara Picconi
1
*Laboratorio di Neurofisiologia, Fondazione Santa Lucia, I.R.C.C.S., 00143 Rome, Italy
1To whom correspondence should be addressed (email b.picconi@hsantalucia.it).
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Biochem Soc Trans (2010) 38 (2): 493–497.
Article history
Received:
August 06 2009
Citation
Vincenza Bagetta, Veronica Ghiglieri, Carmelo Sgobio, Paolo Calabresi, Barbara Picconi; Synaptic dysfunction in Parkinson's disease. Biochem Soc Trans 1 April 2010; 38 (2): 493–497. doi: https://doi.org/10.1042/BST0380493
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