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Neuropeptide S Receptor as an Innovative Therapeutic Target for Parkinson Disease

Journal

PHARMACEUTICALS
Volume 14, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ph14080775

Keywords

Parkinson disease; neuropeptide S; dopamine; oxidative stress; animal models

Funding

  1. Brazilian National Council Research (CNPq) [475188/2011-0, 303072/2019-9]
  2. Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte
  3. CAPES Foundation, Brazil

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This study explores the role of the neuropeptide S (NPS) and its receptor (NPSR) system in Parkinson's disease (PD), suggesting that the NPS/NPSR system may be an emerging therapeutic strategy for alleviating motor and non-motor dysfunctions of PD and possibly slowing disease progression.
Parkinson disease (PD) is a neurodegenerative disease mainly characterized by the loss of nigral dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra pars compacta. Patients suffering from PD develop severe motor dysfunctions and a myriad of non-motor symptoms. The treatment mainly consists of increasing central dopaminergic neurotransmission and alleviating motor symptoms, thus promoting severe side effects without modifying the disease's progress. A growing body of evidence suggests a close relationship between neuropeptide S (NPS) and its receptor (NPSR) system in PD: (i) double immunofluorescence labeling studies showed that NPSR is expressed in the nigral tyrosine hydroxylase (TH)-positive neurons; (ii) central administration of NPS increases spontaneous locomotion in naive rodents; (iii) central administration of NPS ameliorates motor and nonmotor dysfunctions in animal models of PD; (iv) microdialysis studies showed that NPS stimulates dopamine release in naive and parkinsonian rodents; (v) central injection of NPS decreases oxidative damage to proteins and lipids in the rodent brain; and, (vi) 7 days of central administration of NPS protects from the progressive loss of nigral TH-positive cells in parkinsonian rats. Taken together, the NPS/NPSR system seems to be an emerging therapeutic strategy for alleviating motor and non-motor dysfunctions of PD and, possibly, for slowing disease progress.

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