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Cerebellar activity in hemi-parkinsonian rats during volitional gait and freezing.

Publication ,  Journal Article
DeAngelo, V; Gehan, A; Paliwal, S; Ho, K; Hilliard, JD; Chiang, C-H; Viventi, J; McConnell, GC
Published in: Brain communications
January 2024

Parkinson's disease is a neurodegenerative disease characterized by gait dysfunction in the advanced stages of the disease. The unilateral 6-hydroxydopamine toxin-induced model is the most studied animal model of Parkinson's disease, which reproduces gait dysfunction after >68% dopamine loss in the substantia nigra pars compacta. The extent to which the neural activity in hemi-parkinsonian rats correlates to gait dysfunction and dopaminergic cell loss is not clear. In this article, we report the effects of unilateral dopamine depletion on cerebellar vermis activity using micro-electrocorticography during walking and freezing on a runway. Gait and neural activity were measured in 6-hydroxydopamine- and sham-lesioned rats aged between 4 and 5 months at 14, 21 and 28 days after infusion of 6-hydroxydopamine or control vehicle into the medial forebrain bundle (n = 20). Gait deficits in 6-hydroxydopamine rats were different from sham rats at 14 days (P < 0.05). Gait deficits in 6-hydroxydopamine rats improved at 21 and 28 days except for run speed, which decreased at 28 days (P = 0.018). No differences in gait deficits were observed in sham-lesioned rats at any time points. Hemi-parkinsonian rats showed hyperactivity in the cerebellar vermis at 21 days (P < 0.05), but not at 14 and 28 days, and the activity was reduced during freezing epochs in Lobules VIa, VIb and VIc (P < 0.05). These results suggest that dopaminergic cell loss causes pathological cerebellar activity at 21 days post-lesion and suggest that compensatory mechanisms from the intact hemisphere contribute to normalized cerebellar activity at 28 days. The decrease in cerebellar oscillatory activity during freezing may be indicative of neurological changes during freezing of gait in patients with Parkinson's disease making this region a potential location for biomarker detection. Although the unilateral 6-hydroxydopamine model presents gait deficits that parallel clinical presentations of Parkinson's disease, further studies in animal models of bilateral dopamine loss are needed to understand the role of the cerebellar vermis in Parkinson's disease.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Brain communications

DOI

EISSN

2632-1297

ISSN

2632-1297

Publication Date

January 2024

Volume

6

Issue

5

Start / End Page

fcae246

Related Subject Headings

  • 5202 Biological psychology
  • 3209 Neurosciences
  • 3202 Clinical sciences
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
DeAngelo, V., Gehan, A., Paliwal, S., Ho, K., Hilliard, J. D., Chiang, C.-H., … McConnell, G. C. (2024). Cerebellar activity in hemi-parkinsonian rats during volitional gait and freezing. Brain Communications, 6(5), fcae246. https://doi.org/10.1093/braincomms/fcae246
DeAngelo, Valerie, Arianna Gehan, Siya Paliwal, Katherine Ho, Justin D. Hilliard, Chia-Han Chiang, Jonathan Viventi, and George C. McConnell. “Cerebellar activity in hemi-parkinsonian rats during volitional gait and freezing.Brain Communications 6, no. 5 (January 2024): fcae246. https://doi.org/10.1093/braincomms/fcae246.
DeAngelo V, Gehan A, Paliwal S, Ho K, Hilliard JD, Chiang C-H, et al. Cerebellar activity in hemi-parkinsonian rats during volitional gait and freezing. Brain communications. 2024 Jan;6(5):fcae246.
DeAngelo, Valerie, et al. “Cerebellar activity in hemi-parkinsonian rats during volitional gait and freezing.Brain Communications, vol. 6, no. 5, Jan. 2024, p. fcae246. Epmc, doi:10.1093/braincomms/fcae246.
DeAngelo V, Gehan A, Paliwal S, Ho K, Hilliard JD, Chiang C-H, Viventi J, McConnell GC. Cerebellar activity in hemi-parkinsonian rats during volitional gait and freezing. Brain communications. 2024 Jan;6(5):fcae246.

Published In

Brain communications

DOI

EISSN

2632-1297

ISSN

2632-1297

Publication Date

January 2024

Volume

6

Issue

5

Start / End Page

fcae246

Related Subject Headings

  • 5202 Biological psychology
  • 3209 Neurosciences
  • 3202 Clinical sciences