• español
    • English
    • español
    • English
  • Go to e-UCJC Home
View Item 
  •   e-UCJC Home
  • Investigación
  • View Item
  •   e-UCJC Home
  • Investigación
  • View Item
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

Dysregulation of CalDAG-GEFI and CalDAG-GEFII predicts the severity of motor side-effects induced by anti-parkinsonian therapy.

Identifiers
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12020/1220
ISSN: 0027-8424
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0812822106
Author/s
Crittenden, Jill R; Cantuti Castelvetri, Ippolita; Saka, Esen; Keller-McGandy, Christine E; F. Hernandez, Ledia; [et al.]
Date
2009-02-24
Document type
article
Área/s de conocimiento
Biología Celular y Molecular
Ciencias Biomédicas
Materia/s Unesco
24 Ciencias de la Vida
2490 Neurociencias
File/s
Thumbnail
Dysregulation of CalDAG-GEFI and CalDAG-GEFII predicts the severity of motor side-effects induced by anti-parkinsonian therapy (465.8Kb)
Export
RIS
Share
Abstract
Voluntary movement difficulties in Parkinson's disease are initially relieved by l-DOPA therapy, but with disease progression, the repeated l-DOPA treatments can produce debilitating motor abnormalities known as l-DOPA-induced dyskinesias. We show here that 2 striatum-enriched regulators of the Ras/Rap/ERK MAP kinase signal transduction cascade, matrix-enriched CalDAG-GEFI and striosome-enriched CalDAG-GEFII (also known as RasGRP), are strongly and inversely dysregulated in proportion to the severity of abnormal movements induced by l-DOPA in a rat model of parkinsonism. In the dopamine-depleted striatum, the l-DOPA treatments produce down-regulation of CalDAG-GEFI and up-regulation of CalDAG-GEFII mRNAs and proteins, and quantification of the mRNA levels shows that these changes are closely correlated with the severity of the dyskinesias. As these CalDAG-GEFs control ERK cascades, which are implicated in l-DOPA-induced dyskinesias, and have differential compartmental expression patterns in the striatum, we suggest that they may be key molecules involved in the expression of the dyskinesias. They thus represent promising new therapeutic targets for limiting the motor complications induced by l-DOPA therapy.
Collections
  • Investigación
Show full item record

Browse

CollectionsAuthorsTitlesKeywordsAreas of knowledgeAuthor profilesUnesco subjectsThis CollectionAuthorsTitlesKeywordsUnesco subjectsAreas of knowledge

My Account

LoginRegister

Statistics

View Usage Statistics

Of interest

About the repositoryHow to depositSpanish Legislation about Open AccessGlosaryOpen Access MovementOpen Access UCJC Policy

Links

SHERPA/RoMEODulcineaHéloïseCreative Commons Licence

La Universidad Camilo José Cela nace en Madrid en 2000. Forma parte de la Institución Educativa SEK, con más de un siglo de experiencia en educación. Desde nuestra fundación hemos creado un proyecto de calidad cuyo objetivo es formar universitarios globales preparados para la realidad laboral del siglo XXI.

LA UNIVERSIDAD

  • Conoce la universidad
  • International Advisory Board
  • Institución Educativa SEK
  • Fundación Felipe Segovia
  • Campus Villafranca
  • Campus Almagro
  • Deporte
  • Estructura Académica
  • Nuestros profesores
  • Empleo
  • Publicaciones
  • Calidad
  • Normativa
  • Contacto

FACULTADES

  • Escuela de Arquitectura y Tecnología
  • Facultad de Educación
  • Facultad de Salud
  • Facultad de Derecho y Economía
  • Facultad de Comunicación
  • Centros Adscritos

ESTUDIOS

  • Grados Oficiales
  • Adaptación al Grado
  • Dobles Titulaciones
  • Másteres Oficiales
  • Másteres Propios
  • Cursos de experto
  • Cursos de especialista
  • Secretaria de Alumnos

FORMACIÓN CORPORATIVA

PRENSA

  • Contacto

TRABAJA CON NOSOTROS

BUZÓN DE SUGERENCIAS

Universidad Camilo José Cela © 2017 · C/ Castillo de Alarcón, 49 · Urb. Villafranca del Castillo · 28692 Madrid · T. 91 815 31 31 · info@ucjc.edu

  • Contacto
  • Sugerencias