Previously we have shown that addition of amphetamine to physical therapy results in enhanced motor improvement
following stroke in rats, which was associated with the formation of new motor pathways from cortical projection neurons
of the contralesional cortex. It is unclear what mechanisms are involved, but amphetamine is known to induce the neuronal
release of catecholamines as well as upregulate fibroblast growth factor-2 (FGF-2) expression in the brain. Since FGF-2 has
been widely documented to stimulate neurite outgrowth, the present studies were undertaken to provide evidence for
FGF-2 as a neurobiological mechanism underlying amphetamine-induced neuroplasticity. In the present study rats that
received amphetamine plus physical therapy following permanent middle cerebral artery occlusion exhibited significantly
greater motor improvement over animals receiving physical therapy alone. Amphetamine plus physical therapy also
significantly increased the number of FGF-2 expressing pyramidal neurons of the contralesional cortex at 2 weeks poststroke
and resulted in significant axonal outgrowth from these neurons at 8 weeks post-stroke. Since amphetamine is a
known releaser of norepinephrine, in vitro analyses focused on whether noradrenergic stimulation could lead to neurite
outgrowth in a manner requiring FGF-2 activity. Primary cortical neurons did not respond to direct stimulation by
norepinephrine or amphetamine with increased neurite outgrowth. However, conditioned media from astrocytes exposed
to norepinephrine or isoproterenol (a beta adrenergic agonist) significantly increased neurite outgrowth when applied to
neuronal cultures. Adrenergic agonists also upregulated FGF-2 expression in astrocytes. Pharmacological analysis indicated
that beta receptors and alpha1, but not alpha2, receptors were involved in both effects. Antibody neutralization studies
demonstrated that FGF-2 was a critical contributor to neurite outgrowth induced by astrocyte-conditioned media. Taken
together the present results suggest that noradrenergic activation, when combined with physical therapy, can improve
motor recovery following ischemic damage by stimulating the formation of new neural pathways in an FGF-2-dependent
manner.
Funding
This work was supported by the Department of Veterans Affairs, Veterans Health Administration, Office of Research and Development, Biomedical
Laboratory Research and Development and Public Health Service Grant HD 44772 (WAW). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis,
decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.