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Neuropsychiatric and Cognitive Deficits in Parkinson's Disease and Their Modeling in Rodents

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BIOMEDICINES
卷 9, 期 6, 页码 -

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MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines9060684

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Parkinson's disease; non-motor symptoms; rodent models

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Parkinson's disease is associated with a variety of non-motor symptoms, including olfactory and autonomic dysfunction, neuropsychiatric issues, and cognitive impairments. These symptoms can worsen significantly over the course of the disease and may manifest before motor symptoms appear. Rodent models have shown that dopaminergic loss contributes to anxiety, apathy, depression-like behaviors, as well as learning and memory deficits in PD.
Parkinson's disease (PD) is associated with a large burden of non-motor symptoms including olfactory and autonomic dysfunction, as well as neuropsychiatric (depression, anxiety, apathy) and cognitive disorders (executive dysfunctions, memory and learning impairments). Some of these non-motor symptoms may precede the onset of motor symptoms by several years, and they significantly worsen during the course of the disease. The lack of systematic improvement of these non-motor features by dopamine replacement therapy underlines their multifactorial origin, with an involvement of monoaminergic and cholinergic systems, as well as alpha-synuclein pathology in frontal and limbic cortical circuits. Here we describe mood and neuropsychiatric disorders in PD and review their occurrence in rodent models of PD. Altogether, toxin-based rodent models of PD indicate a significant but non-exclusive contribution of mesencephalic dopaminergic loss in anxiety, apathy, and depressive-like behaviors, as well as in learning and memory deficits. Gene-based models display significant deficits in learning and memory, as well as executive functions, highlighting the contribution of alpha-synuclein pathology to these non-motor deficits. Collectively, neuropsychiatric and cognitive deficits are recapitulated to some extent in rodent models, providing partial but nevertheless useful options to understand the pathophysiology of non-motor symptoms and develop therapeutic options for these debilitating symptoms of PD.

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