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Usage Information

Serotonergic mechanisms responsible for levodopa-induced dyskinesias in Parkinson’s disease patients
Marios Politis, … , Sophie Molloy, Paola Piccini
Marios Politis, … , Sophie Molloy, Paola Piccini
Published February 17, 2014
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2014;124(3):1340-1349. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI71640.
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Research Article Neuroscience

Serotonergic mechanisms responsible for levodopa-induced dyskinesias in Parkinson’s disease patients

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Abstract

Levodopa-induced dyskinesias (LIDs) are the most common and disabling adverse motor effect of therapy in Parkinson’s disease (PD) patients. In this study, we investigated serotonergic mechanisms in LIDs development in PD patients using 11C-DASB PET to evaluate serotonin terminal function and 11C-raclopride PET to evaluate dopamine release. PD patients with LIDs showed relative preservation of serotonergic terminals throughout their disease. Identical levodopa doses induced markedly higher striatal synaptic dopamine concentrations in PD patients with LIDs compared with PD patients with stable responses to levodopa. Oral administration of the serotonin receptor type 1A agonist buspirone prior to levodopa reduced levodopa-evoked striatal synaptic dopamine increases and attenuated LIDs. PD patients with LIDs that exhibited greater decreases in synaptic dopamine after buspirone pretreatment had higher levels of serotonergic terminal functional integrity. Buspirone-associated modulation of dopamine levels was greater in PD patients with mild LIDs compared with those with more severe LIDs. These findings indicate that striatal serotonergic terminals contribute to LIDs pathophysiology via aberrant processing of exogenous levodopa and release of dopamine as false neurotransmitter in the denervated striatum of PD patients with LIDs. Our results also support the development of selective serotonin receptor type 1A agonists for use as antidyskinetic agents in PD.

Authors

Marios Politis, Kit Wu, Clare Loane, David J. Brooks, Lorenzo Kiferle, Federico E. Turkheimer, Peter Bain, Sophie Molloy, Paola Piccini

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Usage data is cumulative from July 2024 through July 2025.

Usage JCI PMC
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PDF 83 29
Figure 336 6
Table 99 0
Supplemental data 57 0
Citation downloads 72 0
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Total Views 1,588
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