More and more evidence suggests that increases in dopamine (DA) in striata may participate in neurodegenerative processes during acute ischemia, hypoxia, and excitotoxicity. With a rat model of intrastriatal DA injection, we studied the molecular events involved in DA toxicity. Intrastriatal injections of DA in amounts from 1 to 2 mu mol result in apoptotic cell death, as indicated by terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase labeling of DNA strand breaks and Klenow polymerase-catalyzed [P-32]deoxycytidine triphosphate-labeled DNA laddering, Injections of DA produce a strong and prolonged activated protein 1 (AP-1) activity that contains c-fos, c-jun, and phosphorylated c-jun protein. DA injections also stimulate the activity of nuclear factor-kappa B (NF-kappa B), an oxidative stress-responsive transcription factor. Injection of curcumin at a dose that selectively inhibits AP-1 activation without affecting NF-kappa B activity attenuates DNA laddering induced by DA, Preinjection with SN50, a specific permeable recombinant NF-kappa B translocation inhibitor peptide, reduces DA-induced NF-kappa B activation and apoptosis. Moreover, preinjection of the antioxidant GSH significantly inhibits both DA-induced activation of transcription factors AP-I and NF-kappa B and subsequent apoptosis, Thus, our data suggest that DA-oxidative stress-induced apoptosis in vivo is mediated by activation of transcription factors AP-1 and NF-kappa B.