Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 11, 1016-1031, Copyright © 1991 by Society for Neuroscience
Dopamine differentially regulates dynorphin, substance P, and enkephalin expression in striatal neurons: in situ hybridization histochemical analysis
CR Gerfen, JF McGinty and WS Young 3d
Laboratory of Cell Biology, National Institute of Mental Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892.
Dopamine regulation of the levels of dynorphin, enkephalin, and substance P
messenger RNAs in rat striatal neurons was analyzed with in situ
hybridization histochemistry (ISHH). Relative levels of peptide mRNA
expression in the patch and matrix compartments of the dorsolateral
striatum were compared among control rats, rats treated for 10 d with
apomorphine, rats with unilateral 6-hydroxydopamine (6- OHDA) lesions of
the nigrostriatal dopaminergic system, and rats with nigrostriatal
dopaminergic lesions followed 2 weeks later by 10 d of apomorphine
treatment. Image analysis of ISHH labeling demonstrated that the number of
neurons expressing each peptide mRNA remained constant, whereas the
relative level of peptide mRNA per neuron changed significantly, depending
on the experimental treatment. Dynorphin mRNA expression increased
following chronic apomorphine treatment: striatal patch neurons increased
to an average of 100% above control values, whereas striatal matrix neurons
showed only a 25% increase. Dynorphin mRNA expression decreased following
6-OHDA lesions: patch neurons showed an average 75% reduction in
expression, whereas matrix neurons showed no significant change. In animals
with 6-OHDA lesions followed by apomorphine treatment, both patch and
matrix neurons showed an average increase in dynorphin expression of 300%
above control levels. Changes in dynorphin mRNA levels with these
treatments were matched by qualitative changes in dynorphin
immunoreactivity both in the striatum and in striatonigral terminals in the
substantia nigra. Neither substance P nor enkephalin mRNA levels showed a
significant difference between the striatal patch and matrix compartments
in any experimental condition (in the dorsolateral striatum). Substance P
mRNA expression was increased an average of 50% after 10 d of apomorphine
treatment and showed an average decrease of 75% following 6-OHDA lesions of
the mesostriatal system. There was no significant change in the expression
of substance P mRNA in striatal neurons compared to control values in rats
with combined 6-OHDA lesion and apomorphine treatment. Enkephalin mRNA
expression was not significantly altered by chronic apomorphine treatment
but showed an average increase per cell of some 130% above control levels
following 6-OHDA-induced lesions of the mesostriatal system. In animals
with a 6-OHDA lesion and apomorphine treatment, enkephalin mRNA was also
elevated but not significantly above the levels produced by the lesions
alone. These data show that the expression of dynorphin, enkephalin, and
substance P is differentially regulated by the mesostriatal dopaminergic
system and, further, suggests that the mechanisms by which this regulation
occurs may be different for the 3 peptide families.