INVESTIGADORES
TARAVINI Irene Rita Eloisa
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
Yerba mate tea (Ilex paraguariensis) exerts a neuroprotective effect on intrastriatal 6-OHDA-lesioned mice model of Parkinson?s disease.
Autor/es:
TARAVINI IRE.; GOMEZ G.; TRIBBIA LT.; CURA AC.; RIVERO RC.; BERNARDI MA.; FERRARIO JE.; BALDI CORONEL B.; GERSHANIK OS.; GATTO EM.
Lugar:
Niza
Reunión:
Congreso; 2019 International Congress of Parkinson´s Disease and Movement Disorders.; 2019
Institución organizadora:
International Movement Disorder Society
Resumen:
Objective: We set to investigate the possible neuroprotective effect of yerba mate (YM) consumption on dopaminergic neurons in a mice model of Parkinson?s disease (PD).Background: The motor symptoms of PD mainly emerge from the gradual degeneration and loss of dopamine neurons within the substantia nigra. Novel treatment approaches are needed as there is no current preventive therapy for PD. However, an inverse association was found between coffee intake or smoking and the occurrence of PD. Likewise, a case-control study revealed that consumption of ?mate? also has an inverse association with the risk of developing PD. Furthermore, we have recently shown that YM favors survival and growth of dopaminergic neurons in culture. Mate is an infusion from the plant Ilex paraguariensis (popularly known as yerba mate) widely consumed in several South American and Mediterranean countries. This infusion contains bioactive phenolic compounds with strong antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties.Method: The extract of YM was obtained by ?cebada simulada?, an extraction method that emulates the way it is commonly consumed and the main bioactive compounds (caffeine, theobromine, chlorogenic acid and rutin) were quantified by HPLC. A partial degeneration of dopaminergic neurons, as an early model of PD, was induced by a 6-OHDA injection into the striatum of wild type mice. Animals received water (control) or ?mate? as their only source of fluid. Different periods of YM administration and concentrations were evaluated. During the treatment, locomotor activity was evaluated in open field (OF) sessions, and after sacrifice, tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) immunohistochemistry was performed to evaluate the degree of dopaminergic denervation.Results: The infusion of YM was well accepted by the animals. Mice that drank mate showed increased locomotor behavior compared to controls during the OF sessions. The denervation protocol we used induced a lesion degree ranging from 31 to 57%. Mice receiving a YM treatment for 4 months, after the injury with 6-OHDA, had a 12% higher density of dopaminergic fibers remaining in the striatum than control mice.Conclusion: These results provide further evidence on the beneficial properties of YM and could lead to the development of novel preventive therapeutic interventions using YM in association with the most commonly used drugs to treat PD.