The role of environmental contaminants in causing Parkinson's disease (PD) is well known, with rotenone and paraquat being the notable neurotoxins. Traces of the metalloid arsenic are frequently found in drinking water which is considered a threat to the brain's health. Pre-clinical and epidemiological studies have associated arsenic with PD whereby behavioral and neurochemical alterations were observed. However, the impact of arsenic toxicity on the dopaminergic neurons of substantia nigra (SN), the hallmark region which degenerates in PD, has not been shown yet. In the present study, administration of 20mg/kg b.w., arsenic for 28days caused significant loss of dopaminergic neurons and their terminals respectively in the SN and striatum regions of mice brain. Moreover, the arsenic-fed rodents exhibited depleted striatal dopamine, prolonged latency to move and correct posture, and reduced exploratory behavior and neurological severity. Further, mitochondrial complexes II and IV were found to be inhibited in the SN, cortex, striatum, and hippocampus of arsenic-fed mice. Additionally, inflammatory marker glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) and neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) expressed in glial cells and neurons respectively were enhanced in the nigrostriatal pathway of arsenic-fed animals. The present study for the first time reports that arsenic causes Parkinsonism by degenerating nigrostriatal dopaminergic neurons through mitochondrial complex inhibition and inflammatory stress. The study further puts forward validatory evidence for the potential of arsenic in causing PD and the reliability of the arsenic-induced PD model for exploring the disease pathogenesis and treatment.
Read full abstract