Hsp70 and MDMA neurotoxicity
2007
Escobedo, Isabel | Peraile, Ines | Orio, Laura | Colado, M Isabel | O'Shea, Esther
3,4-Methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA, 'ecstasy') produces acute hyperthermia which increases the severity of the selective serotoninergic neurotoxicity produced by the drug in rats. Heat shock protein 70 (Hsp70) is a major inducible cellular protein expressed in stress conditions and which is thought to exert protective functions. MDMA (12.5 mg/kg, i.p.), given to rats housed at 22°C, produced an immediate hyperthermia and increased Hsp70 in frontal cortex between 3 h and 7 days after administration. MDMA, given to rats housed at low ambient temperature (4°C) produced transient hypothermia followed by mild hyperthermia but no increase in Hsp70 expression, while rats treated at elevated room temperature (30°C) showed enhanced hyperthermia and similar expression of Hsp70 to that seen in rats housed at 22°C. Fluoxetine-induced inhibition of 5-HT release and hydroxyl radical formation did not modify MDMA-induced Hsp70 expression 3 h later. Four- or 8-day heat shock (elevation of basal rectal temperature by 1.5°C for 1 h) or geldanamycin pre-treatment induced Hsp70 expression and protected against MDMA-induced serotoninergic neurotoxicity without affecting drug-induced hyperthermia. Thus, MDMA-induced Hsp70 expression depends on the drug-induced hyperthermic response and not on 5-HT release or hydroxyl radical formation and pre-induction of Hsp70 protects against the long-term serotoninergic damage produced by MDMA.
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