Abstract

Young adult female rats received a 6-hydroxydopamine lesion in the left substantia nigra and, 3 weeks later, some of them were grafted with a cell suspension from the ventral mesencephalon of rat embryos (14–15 days old). Six months after transplantation, some grafted rats, following injection of amphetamine, had switched to turning only toward the intact side (type 1), whereas others turned toward the intact side only during the first half of the test (type 2). Levels of dopamine, dihydroxyphenylacetic acid and homovanillic acid were, respectively, 2%, 15% and 35% of the intact side in the denervated striatum of 6-hydroxydopamine rats. Dopamine concentrations were restored to 13% and 10% of the intact side in the grafted striatum of type 1 and type 2 animals, respectively. Levels of homovanillic acid were unchanged following grafts whereas those of dihydroxyphenylacetic acid increased by 209% and 247% in the grafted striatum of type 1 and type 2 animals, respectively. The ratios of dihydroxyphenylacetic acid/dopamine as well as homovanillic acid/dopamine were low in the intact striatum whereas they increased in the denervated striatum with or without graft. The tyrosine hydroxylase immunoreactivity decreased by about 80% in the denervated striatum of 6-hydroxydopamine rats. In type 1 rats, tyrosine hydroxylase immunoreactivity revealed that the graft was localized in the dorsomedial part of the denervated striatum, whereas in type 2 animals, it was also in the medial striatum but it overlapped the dorsal and ventral parts of it equally. D 1 as well as D 2 dopamine receptors were measured throughout the striatum (9.0−7.6 rostral-caudal coordinates), by autoradiography, using [ 3H]SCH 23390 (D 1 antagonist) and [ 3H]spiperone (D 2 antagonist) binding. Supersensitive D 2 receptors were normalized in the dorso- and ventromedial parts of the grafted striatum. D 2 receptor density was higher in type 2 than in type 1 rats, more specifically at 8.6−8.2 rostral-caudal coordinates, where the graft was. D 1 receptor supersensitivity was modest compared to D 2 receptors in the striatum of 6-hydroxydopamine rats and decreased following grats. DA receptors changes in the striatum, following fetal mesencephalic grafts, may explain the behavioral recovery seen in grafted rats.

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