The 65th Annual Meeting of Japanese Association for Oral Biology

Presentation information

Poster

Poster session

Mon. Sep 18, 2023 8:30 AM - 3:50 PM Poster Presentation (131講義室)

[P3-3-09] Reduced Intraoral Menthol Sensitivity in A Prodromal Parkinson's Disease Model Mice with Intranasal Rotenone

〇Hajime Sato1, Satoh Keitaro1, Kazunori Nozaki2, Misato Yugawa3, Takafumi Kato4, Hiroki Toyoda4, Ayano Katagiri4, Kazunori Adachi1 (1. Div Pharmacol, Meikai Univ Sch Dent, 2. Div Med Info, Osaka Univ Dent Hosp, 3. Div Orthod, Meikai Univ Sch Dent, 4. Dept Oral Physiol, Osaka Univ Grad Sch Dent)

Keywords:パーキンソン病、ロテノン、メントール

Parkinson’s disease (PD), the second most common neurodegenerative disease characterized primarily by motor symptoms, causes prodromal non-motor symptoms including sensory dysfunction (e.g., impaired senses of smell, taste and/or touch). We previously report that bitter taste impairments may occur simultaneously, but independently, of olfactory impairments in a presumed animal model in the early-stage of PD. Other sensation such as cold/cool may at least partly affect taste sensation, but it remains unclear whether our model exhibits other sensory impairments. In this study, we examined the disturbances of the intraoral/intranasal menthol sensation, such as coolness/irritation at low and high concentrations of menthol, in 1-week intranasal rotenone administrated-mice using brief-access exposure test. One solution from the 7-concentration series of (–)-menthol (0-2.3 mM) or the bitter taste quinine-HCl (0.3 mM) were randomly selected, respectively, to be presented once a day for 10-s to the water-deprived mice at before and 1-week after rotenone treatment. Correlated to increasing in the menthol concentration, the latency of the first lick was gradually increased before rotenone treatment, but not 1-week after. The mean standardized cumulative lick curve for menthol was observed as a dose-dependent slope, and not altered by the rotenone treatment. In addition, the total number of licks during 20 trials was significantly increased in rotenone-treated animals at high concentration of menthol and 0.3 mM quinine-HCl, compared to the data obtained before rotenone treatment. These results indicated that mice administrated with rotenone intranasally for 1-week exhibited a reduction in the intraoral/intranasal menthol sensitivity in addition to bitter taste impairments.