Analysis of Acute and Chronic Methamphetamine Treatment in Mice on Gdnf System Expression Reveals a Potential Mechanism of Schizophrenia Susceptibility

Author:

Casserly Laoise1,Garton Daniel R.1,Montaño-Rodriguez Ana1,Andressoo Jaan-Olle12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pharmacology, Faculty of Medicine, Helsinki Institute of Life Science, University of Helsinki, 00290 Helsinki, Finland

2. Division of Neurogeriatrics, Department of Neurobiology, Care Science and Society (NVS), Karolinska Institutet, 17177 Stockholm, Sweden

Abstract

The increase in presynaptic striatal dopamine is the main dopaminergic abnormality in schizophrenia (SCZ). SCZ is primarily treated by modulating the activity of monoamine systems, with a focus on dopamine and serotonin receptors. Glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) is a strong dopaminergic factor, that recently was shown to correlate with SCZ in human CSF and in striatal tissue. A 2-3-fold increase in GDNF in the brain was sufficient to induce SCZ-like dopaminergic and behavioural changes in mice. Here, we analysed the effect of acute, chronic, and embryonic methamphetamine, a drug known to enhance the risk of psychosis, on Gdnf and its receptors, Gfra1 and Ret, as well as on monoamine metabolism-related gene expression in the mouse brain. We found that acute methamphetamine application increases Gdnf expression in the striatum and chronic methamphetamine decreases the striatal expression of GDNF receptors Gfra1 and Ret. Both chronic and acute methamphetamine treatment upregulated the expression of genes related to dopamine and serotonin metabolism in the striatum, prefrontal cortex, and substantia nigra. Our results suggest a potential mechanism as to how methamphetamine elicits individual psychosis risk in young adults—variation in initial striatal GDNF induction and subsequent GFRα1 and RET downregulation may determine individual susceptibility to psychosis. Our results may guide future experiments and precision medicine development for methamphetamine-induced psychosis using GDNF/GFRa1/RET antagonists.

Funder

Academy of Finland

Sigrid Juselius Foundation

Center of Innovative Medicine (CIMED), Hjärnfonden, Swedish Research Council

Helsinki Institute of Life Science, and by European Research Council

University of Helsinki Doctoral Programme Brain and Mind

University of Helsinki

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Molecular Biology,Biochemistry

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