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Vol. 304, Issue 1, 266-271, January 2003
Departments of Pharmacology and Toxicology (C.W., J.M., J.B.W.,
J.B., N.A., J.A.G., Y.Y., K.M.J.) and Psychiatry and Behavioral
Sciences (C.W., K.M.J.), University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston,
Texas; and MetaPhore Pharmaceuticals (D.S.), St. Louis, Missouri
Repetitive administration of phencyclidine (PCP) in the perinatal
period results in cortical apoptosis and a long-lasting deficit in
sensorimotor gating. Because these changes are olanzapine-sensitive, we
have suggested that the effects of perinatal PCP could be used to model
certain aspects of schizophrenia. Studies of PCP and N-methyl-D-aspartate-induced cell death
suggested that superoxide could play a role in the pathway leading to
death after PCP administration. The purpose of the current study was to
determine whether the in vivo administration of M40403, a
superoxide dismutase mimetic, could prevent PCP-induced cortical
apoptosis and/or deficits in prepulse inhibition. Perinatal rat pups
were administered 10 mg/kg PCP on postnatal (PN) days 7, 9, and 11 with
or without treatment with 10 mg/kg M40403. Pups were either killed on
PN 12 for analysis of various apoptotic markers or they were assessed
for prepulse inhibition on PN 24 to 26. Treatment with M40403 2 and
24 h after each PCP treatment prevented PCP-induced increases in
two measures of apoptosis in the dorsolateral frontal cortex and in the
olfactory cortex. PCP-induced proapoptotic changes in Bax and
Bcl-XL were also prevented by M40403 treatment. This
regimen did not prevent the deficit in prepulse inhibition caused by
PCP treatment, but when the treatment regimen was extended through PN
23, M40403 completely prevented the PCP-induced deficit in prepulse
inhibition. These data suggest that perinatal PCP treatment leads to
long-lasting changes in the pathway(s), leading to cell death and
behavioral deficits, and that the superoxide radical plays a critical
role in the underlying mechanism.
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