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Histopathological and Behavioral Assessment of Toxin-Produced Cerebellar Lesion: A Potent Model for Cell Transplantation Studies in The Cerebellum

OBJECTIVE: The cerebellum is a key structure involved in coordinated motor planning, cognition, learning and memory functions. This study presents a permanent model of a toxin produced cerebellar lesion characterized according to contemporary motor and cognitive abnormalities. MATERIALS AND METHODS:...

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Autores principales: Edalatmanesh, Mohammad Amin, Nikfarjam, Haniyeh, Moghadas, Marzieh, Haddad-Mashadrizeh, Aliakbar, Robati, Reza, Hashemzadeh, Mohammad Reza
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Royan Institute 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4204196/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24567944
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author Edalatmanesh, Mohammad Amin
Nikfarjam, Haniyeh
Moghadas, Marzieh
Haddad-Mashadrizeh, Aliakbar
Robati, Reza
Hashemzadeh, Mohammad Reza
author_facet Edalatmanesh, Mohammad Amin
Nikfarjam, Haniyeh
Moghadas, Marzieh
Haddad-Mashadrizeh, Aliakbar
Robati, Reza
Hashemzadeh, Mohammad Reza
author_sort Edalatmanesh, Mohammad Amin
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: The cerebellum is a key structure involved in coordinated motor planning, cognition, learning and memory functions. This study presents a permanent model of a toxin produced cerebellar lesion characterized according to contemporary motor and cognitive abnormalities. MATERIALS AND METHODS: In this experimental study, slow administration of quinolinic acid (QA, 5 µl of 200 µmol, 1 µl/minute) in the right cerebellar hemisphere (lobule VI) caused noticeable motor and cognitive disturbances along with cellular degeneration in all treated animals. We assessed behavioral and histopathological studies over ten weeks after QA treatment. The data were analyzed with ANOVA and the student’s t test. RESULTS: The QA treated group showed marked motor learning deficits on the rotating rod test (p=0.0001), locomotor asymmetry on the cylinder test (p=0.0001), dysmetria on the beam balance test (p=0.0001), abnormalities in neuromuscular strength on the hang wire test (p=0.0001), spatial memory deficits in the Morris water maze (MWM, p=0.001) and fear conditioned memory on the passive avoidance test (p=0.01) over a ten-week period compared with the control animals. Histopathological analysis showed loss of Purkinje cells (p=0.001) and granular cell density (p=0.0001) in the lesioned hemisphere of the cerebellum. CONCLUSION: Results of the present study show that QA can remove numerous cells which respond to this toxin in hemispheric lobule VI and thus provide a potential model for functional and cell-based studies.
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spelling pubmed-42041962014-11-07 Histopathological and Behavioral Assessment of Toxin-Produced Cerebellar Lesion: A Potent Model for Cell Transplantation Studies in The Cerebellum Edalatmanesh, Mohammad Amin Nikfarjam, Haniyeh Moghadas, Marzieh Haddad-Mashadrizeh, Aliakbar Robati, Reza Hashemzadeh, Mohammad Reza Cell J Original Article OBJECTIVE: The cerebellum is a key structure involved in coordinated motor planning, cognition, learning and memory functions. This study presents a permanent model of a toxin produced cerebellar lesion characterized according to contemporary motor and cognitive abnormalities. MATERIALS AND METHODS: In this experimental study, slow administration of quinolinic acid (QA, 5 µl of 200 µmol, 1 µl/minute) in the right cerebellar hemisphere (lobule VI) caused noticeable motor and cognitive disturbances along with cellular degeneration in all treated animals. We assessed behavioral and histopathological studies over ten weeks after QA treatment. The data were analyzed with ANOVA and the student’s t test. RESULTS: The QA treated group showed marked motor learning deficits on the rotating rod test (p=0.0001), locomotor asymmetry on the cylinder test (p=0.0001), dysmetria on the beam balance test (p=0.0001), abnormalities in neuromuscular strength on the hang wire test (p=0.0001), spatial memory deficits in the Morris water maze (MWM, p=0.001) and fear conditioned memory on the passive avoidance test (p=0.01) over a ten-week period compared with the control animals. Histopathological analysis showed loss of Purkinje cells (p=0.001) and granular cell density (p=0.0001) in the lesioned hemisphere of the cerebellum. CONCLUSION: Results of the present study show that QA can remove numerous cells which respond to this toxin in hemispheric lobule VI and thus provide a potential model for functional and cell-based studies. Royan Institute 2014 2014-10-04 /pmc/articles/PMC4204196/ /pubmed/24567944 Text en Any use, distribution, reproduction or abstract of this publication in any medium, with the exception of commercial purposes, is permitted provided the original work is properly cited http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Article
Edalatmanesh, Mohammad Amin
Nikfarjam, Haniyeh
Moghadas, Marzieh
Haddad-Mashadrizeh, Aliakbar
Robati, Reza
Hashemzadeh, Mohammad Reza
Histopathological and Behavioral Assessment of Toxin-Produced Cerebellar Lesion: A Potent Model for Cell Transplantation Studies in The Cerebellum
title Histopathological and Behavioral Assessment of Toxin-Produced Cerebellar Lesion: A Potent Model for Cell Transplantation Studies in The Cerebellum
title_full Histopathological and Behavioral Assessment of Toxin-Produced Cerebellar Lesion: A Potent Model for Cell Transplantation Studies in The Cerebellum
title_fullStr Histopathological and Behavioral Assessment of Toxin-Produced Cerebellar Lesion: A Potent Model for Cell Transplantation Studies in The Cerebellum
title_full_unstemmed Histopathological and Behavioral Assessment of Toxin-Produced Cerebellar Lesion: A Potent Model for Cell Transplantation Studies in The Cerebellum
title_short Histopathological and Behavioral Assessment of Toxin-Produced Cerebellar Lesion: A Potent Model for Cell Transplantation Studies in The Cerebellum
title_sort histopathological and behavioral assessment of toxin-produced cerebellar lesion: a potent model for cell transplantation studies in the cerebellum
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4204196/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24567944
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