In a hopeful note, treating dopamine-producing nerve cells with antioxidants lessened damage
The brain chemical missing in Parkinson’s disease may have a hand in its own death.
Dopamine, the neurotransmitter that helps keep body movements fluid, can kick off a toxic
chain reaction that ultimately kills the nerve cells that make it, a new study suggests.
By studying lab dishes of human nerve cells, or neurons, derived from Parkinson’s patients,
researchers found that a harmful form of dopamine can inflict damage on cells in multiple
ways. The result, published online September 7 in Science, “brings multiple pieces of the
puzzle together,” says neuroscientist Teresa Hastings of the University of Pittsburgh School
of Medicine.
The finding also hints at a potential treatment for the estimated 10 million people worldwide
with Parkinson’s: Less cellular damage occurred when some of the neurons were treated
early on with antioxidants, molecules that can scoop up harmful chemicals inside cells.
Study coauthor Dimitri Krainc, a neurologist and neuroscientist at Northwestern University
Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago, and colleagues took skin biopsies from healthy
people and people with one of two types of Parkinson’s disease, inherited or spontaneously
arising. The researchers then coaxed these skin cells into becoming dopamine-producing
neurons. These cells were similar to those found in the substantia nigra, the movement-
related region of the brain that degenerates in Parkinson’s.
https://www.sciencenews.org/article/brain-chemical-lost-parkinsons-may-contribute-its-own-demise
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