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Transition Metals, Ferritin, Glutathione, and Ascorbic Acid in Parkinsonian Brains

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1989

Year

TLDR

The study compared regional distributions of iron, copper, zinc, magnesium, and calcium in Parkinsonian brains with matched controls. In severe Parkinson’s disease, substantia nigra shows increased total iron, iron(III), ferritin, and a shift toward iron(III) with reduced glutathione, while mild disease shows no significant metal or glutathione changes, suggesting these alterations may drive PD pathophysiology.

Abstract

The regional distributions of iron, copper, zinc, magnesium, and calcium in parkinsonian brains were compared with those of matched controls. In mild Parkinson's disease (PD), there were no significant differences in the content of total iron between the two groups, whereas there was a significant increase in total iron and iron (III) in substantia nigra of severely affected patients. Although marked regional distributions of iron, magnesium, and calcium were present, there were no changes in magnesium, calcium, and copper in various brain areas of PD. The most notable finding was a shift in the iron (II)/iron (III) ratio in favor of iron (III) in substantia nigra and a significant increase in the iron (III)-binding, protein, ferritin. A significantly lower glutathione content was present in pooled samples of putamen, globus pallidus, substantia nigra, nucleus basalis of Meynert, amygdaloid nucleus, and frontal cortex of PD brains with severe damage to substantia nigra, whereas no significant changes were observed in clinicopathologically mild forms of PD. In all these regions, except the amygdaloid nucleus, ascorbic acid was not decreased. Reduced glutathione and the shift of the iron (II)/iron (III) ratio in favor of iron (III) suggest that these changes might contribute to pathophysiological processes underlying PD.

References

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