Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:1.14.16.2 (tyrosine hydroxylase)
14,760 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

To obtain a better understanding of the evolution of the brain catecholaminergic systems of fishes, we have examined the distribution of catecholamine-synthesizing enzymes in two species of sturgeon (Acipenser baeri and Huso huso) using antibodies against tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) and dopamine-beta -hydroxylase (DBH; only analyzed in Acipenser). Both sturgeons showed TH-immunoreactive (THir) neurons widely distributed in most regions of the brain, the highest number of THir cells being located in the forebrain (olfactory bulb, preoptic area, and posterior tuberculum). THir cells were also seen in other forebrain areas (retrobulbar area, dorsal and ventral telencephalic areas, hypothalamus, ventral thalamus, pretectal area) and in the brainstem (locus coeruleus, viscerosensory area, caudal reticular formation, and area postrema). Immunoreactive fibers and varicosities showed a wide distribution, being particularly abundant in the diencephalon and mesencephalon. DBH-immunoreactive (DBHir) cells were observed in the anterior tuberal nucleus, where these cells were TH-negative, and in the locus coeruleus and the caudal rhombencephalon (vagal reticular formation), where the DBHir cells were also THir. DBHir fibers were scarce in the telencephalon and very abundant in the diencephalon, mesencephalon, and rhombencephalon. The comparative analysis of the catecholaminergic systems of chondrosteans and those observed in other groups of fishes and tetrapods indicate a similar organization of many nuclei, as well as characteristics that are probably primitive, such as the presence of a large number of forebrain catecholaminergic groups.
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PMID:Distribution of tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) and dopamine beta-hydroxylase (DBH) immunoreactivity in the central nervous system of two chondrostean fishes (Acipenser baeri and Huso huso). 1211 9

Enzymes involved in catecholamine synthesis are present in the highest concentration in the adrenal medulla, however they were found also in other, mainly nervous tissues. The aim of our study was to quantify the exact concentration of tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) and dopamine-ss-hydroxylase (DBH) mRNA in rat stellate ganglia under control conditions and at different intervals after exposure to immobilization stress (IMO). In rats immobilized once for 2h, we determined TH and DBH mRNA in different time intervals up to 22 h after the end of the stress stimulus. TH immunoreactive protein levels were also determined in stellate ganglia. TH and DBH mRNA levels were quantified by RT-competitive-PCR. In stellate ganglia, the concentration of TH mRNA was 17+/-1.6 amol/microg of total RNA, which is approximately 30-times lower than in the adrenal medulla. The concentration of DBH mRNA in the stellate ganglia was 2601+/-203 amol/microg of total RNA, which is the concentration similar to adrenal medulla, but is 150-times higher than concentration of TH mRNA in stellate ganglia. After a single 2-h immobilization the highest elevation of TH and DBH mRNA levels was measured 22 h after the termination of the stress stimulus. Repeated immobilization (7 days, 2h daily) did not produce further increase in TH and DBH mRNA levels compared to already elevated levels in adapted control group (immobilized for 6 days, 2h daily and decapitated 22 h later). Levels of TH protein were significantly changed only after the repeated immobilization. This study compared for the first time the precise amounts of TH and DBH mRNA in rat stellate ganglia under control conditions and after immobilization stress, and indicates large differences in their concentration. TH and DBH mRNA concentrations in stellate ganglia are markedly elevated for a prolonged period of time after termination of the stress stimuli.
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PMID:Quantitation of changes in gene expression of norepinephrine biosynthetic enzymes in rat stellate ganglia induced by stress. 1268 3

The seasonal pattern of breeding in sheep offers an opportunity to examine plasticity of neuronal inputs to gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) neurones. We used conventional fluorescence microscopy and confocal microscopy to compare the extent of input to GnRH neurones from various neuropeptide/neurotransmitter systems in ewes during the breeding and anestrous seasons. Using double-labelling immunohistochemistry, we counted close appositions between GnRH cells and varicosities that were immunoreactive for either glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD; for gamma-amino butyric acid-GABA-neurones), dopamine beta hydroxylase (DBH; for noradrenergic neurones), vesicular glutamate transporter-1 (VGluT-1, for glutamatergic neurones), neuropeptide Y (NPY) and tyrosine hydroxylase (TH; for dopaminergic/noradrenergic neurones). The percentage of GnRH cells displaying close appositions to GABA-ergic varicosities was higher (P < 0.02) in anestrus than in the breeding season. The percentage of GnRH cells receiving input from varicosities that were positive for TH, DBH and VGluT-1 was similar in both seasons. Approximately 26-49% of GnRH neurones were seen to receive inputs from NPY, TH, GABAergic or noradrenergic neurones, while a larger number of GnRH cells (72-75%) received input from glutamatergic neurones. Conventional microscopy consistently overestimated the number of close contacts on GnRH neurones compared to confocal microscopy. For TH-immunoreactive varicosities in the preoptic area, only 16-35% were also immunoreactive for DBH, suggesting that the remainder are dopaminergic. Approximately half of the noradrenergic inputs in the preoptic area were also immunoreactive for NPY. In conclusion, we present numerical data on the consensus between light and confocal microscopy and the level of input of various neuronal systems to GnRH cells; the data indicate a seasonal change in the GABAergic input to GnRH neurones.
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PMID:Seasonal changes in the inputs to gonadotropin-releasing hormone neurones in the ewe brain: an assessment by conventional fluorescence and confocal microscopy. 1269 80

Butyrate is a diet-derived, gut fermentation product with an array of effects on cultured mammalian cells including inhibition of proliferation, induction of differentiation and regulation of gene expression. We showed that physiological concentrations of butyrate can regulate transcription of tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) and preproenkephalin (ppEnk) gene in PC12 cells. In promoter deletion studies, electrophoretic mobility shift assays and by site-directed mutagenesis, we identified a novel butyrate response element (BRE) in the 5' upstream region of the rat TH gene, homologous to the previously mapped motif in the ppEnk promoter. No such enhancers were found in DBH or PNMT promoters, and both catecholamine system-related gene promoters were unaffected by butyrate. The BRE motif interacts with nuclear proteins in a sequence-specific manner, shows binding potentiation in butyrate-differentiated PC12 cells and bound protein(s) are competed away with TH-CRE oligonucleotides or by the addition of CREB-specific antibodies, suggesting involvement of CREB or CREB-related transcription factors. Moreover, single point mutation in the distal BRE abolished binding of transcription factors and reduced the response to butyrate in transient transfection studies. The canonical CRE motif of the TH promoter was also found necessary for transcriptional activation of the TH gene by butyrate. Our data identified a novel functional element in the promoter of both the TH and ppEnk genes mediating transcriptional responses to butyrate. Dietary butyrate may have an extended role in the control of catecholamine and endogenous opioid production at the level of TH and ppEnk gene transcription neuronal plasticity, cardiovascular functions, stress adaptation and behavior.
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PMID:Butyrate, a gut-derived environmental signal, regulates tyrosine hydroxylase gene expression via a novel promoter element. 1616 21

Gata3 mutant mice expire of noradrenergic deficiency by embryonic day (E) 11 and can be rescued pharmacologically or, as shown here, by restoring Gata3 function specifically in sympathoadrenal (SA) lineages using the human DBH promoter to direct Gata3 transgenic expression. In Gata3-null embryos, there was significant impairment of SA differentiation and increased apoptosis in adrenal chromaffin cells and sympathetic neurons. Additionally, mRNA analyses of purified chromaffin cells from Gata3 mutants show that levels of Mash1, Hand2 and Phox2b (postulated upstream regulators of Gata3) as well as terminally differentiated SA lineage products (tyrosine hydroxylase, Th, and dopamine beta-hydroxylase, Dbh) are markedly altered. However, SA lineage-specific restoration of Gata3 function in the Gata3 mutant background rescues the expression phenotypes of the downstream, as well as the putative upstream genes. These data not only underscore the hypothesis that Gata3 is essential for the differentiation and survival of SA cells, but also suggest that their differentiation is controlled by mutually reinforcing feedback transcriptional interactions between Gata3, Mash1, Hand2 and Phox2b in the SA lineage.
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PMID:Gata3 participates in a complex transcriptional feedback network to regulate sympathoadrenal differentiation. 1694 77

Biosynthesis and metabolism of serotonin and catecholamines involve at least eight individual enzymes that are mainly expressed in tissues derived from the neuroectoderm, e.g., the central nervous system (CNS), pineal gland, adrenal medulla, enterochromaffin tissue, sympathetic nerves, and ganglia. Some of the enzymes appear to have additional biological functions and are also expressed in the heart and various other internal organs. The biosynthetic enzymes are tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), tryptophan hydroxylases type 1 and 2 (TPH1, TPH2), aromatic amino acid decarboxylase (AADC), dopamine beta-hydroxylase (DbetaH), and phenylethanolamine N-methyltransferase (PNMT), and the specific catabolic enzymes are monoamine oxidase A (MAO-A) and catechol O-methyltransferase (COMT). For the TH, DDC, DBH, and MAOA genes, many single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) with unknown function, and small but increasing numbers of cases with autosomal recessive mutations have been recognized. For the remaining genes (TPH1, TPH2, PNMT, and COMT) several different genetic markers have been suggested to be associated with regulation of mood, pain perception, and aggression, as well as psychiatric disturbances such as schizophrenia, depression, suicidality, and attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder. The genetic markers may either have a functional role of their own, or be closely linked to other unknown functional variants. In the future, molecular testing may become important for the diagnosis of such conditions. Here we present an overview on mutations and polymorphisms in the group of genes encoding monoamine neurotransmitter metabolizing enzymes. At the same time we propose a unified nomenclature for the nucleic acid aberrations in these genes. New variations or details on mutations will be updated in the Pediatric Neurotransmitter Disorder Data Base (PNDDB) database (www.bioPKU.org).
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PMID:Mutations in human monoamine-related neurotransmitter pathway genes. 1844 57

Vocal communication is critical for successful social interactions among conspecifics, but little is known about how the brain regulates context-appropriate communication. The neurotransmitter dopamine (DA) is involved in modulating highly motivated, goal-directed behaviors (including sexually motivated singing behavior), and emerging data suggest that the role of DA in vocal communication may differ depending on the context in which it occurs. To address this possibility, relationships between immunolabeled tyrosine hydroxylase (TH, the rate-limiting enzyme in catecholamine synthesis) and song produced within versus outside of a breeding context were explored in male European starlings (Sturnus vulgaris). Immunocytochemistry for dopamine beta-hydroxylase (DBH; the enzyme that converts DA to norepinephrine) was also performed to provide insight into whether relationships between song and TH immunoreactivity reflected dopaminergic or noradrenergic neurotransmission. Measures of TH and DBH were quantified in song control regions (HVC, Area X, robust nucleus of the acropallium) and regions implicated in motivation (medial preoptic nucleus (POM), ventral tegmental area (VTA), and midbrain central gray). In Area X, POM, and VTA measures of TH correlated with song produced within, but not outside of a breeding context. DBH in these regions did not correlate with song in either context. Together, these data suggest DA in both song control and motivation brain regions may be more tightly linked to the regulation of highly goal-directed, sexually motivated vocal behavior.
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PMID:Evidence that dopamine within motivation and song control brain regions regulates birdsong context-dependently. 1861 78

Norepinephrine-deficient mice harbor a disruption of the gene for dopamine-beta-hydroxylase (DBH-KO). Corticotropin-releasing hormone knockout mice (CRH-KO) have markedly reduced HPA activity. The aim of the present work was to study how deficiency of DBH and CRH would affect tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), DBH, and phenylethanolamine N-methyltransferase (PNMT) gene expression and protein levels in the adrenal medulla (AM) and stellate ganglia (SG) of control and stressed mice. Both in AM and SG, single immobilization significantly increased TH and DBH mRNA and protein levels both in wild-type (WT) and CRH-KO mice. On the other hand, the stress-triggered increase in PNMT mRNA and protein levels seen in WT mice was absent in CRH-KO mice. DBH-KO mice are more sensitive to stress but survive a single 2 h restraint stress in a tube. The increase in TH mRNA levels induced by restraint stress in WT was not observed in DBH-KO mice. PNMT mRNA and especially PNMT protein levels were significantly elevated in AM of DBH-KO mice. In SG of DBH-KO mice, TH mRNA levels were not affected; however, PNMT gene expression was highly elevated. Thus, disruption of the DBH gene surprisingly blocks the stress-induced elevation of TH mRNA levels in AM but increases PNMT gene expression in both AM and SG. Our data indicate that adrenergic signaling is required for stress-induced increase in TH mRNA and that this signaling restrains stress-induced increase in PNMT mRNA. They also confirm that the HPA system plays a crucial role in the stress-induced regulation of PNMT gene expression.
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PMID:Regulation of gene expression of catecholamine biosynthetic enzymes in dopamine-beta-hydroxylase- and CRH-knockout mice exposed to stress. 1912 Jan 18

Myocardial infarction causes a heterogeneity of noradrenergic transmission that contributes to the development of ventricular arrhythmias and sudden cardiac death. Ischaemia-induced alterations in sympathetic transmission include regional variations in cardiac noradrenaline (NA) and in tyrosine hydroxylase, the rate-limiting enzyme in NA synthesis. Inflammatory cytokines that act through gp130 are elevated in the heart after myocardial infarction. These cytokines decrease expression of tyrosine hydroxylase in sympathetic neurons, and indirect evidence suggests that they contribute to the local depletion of tyrosine hydroxylase in the damaged left ventricle. However, gp130 cytokines are also important for the survival of cardiac myocytes following damage to the heart. To examine the effect of cytokines on tyrosine hydroxylase and NA content in cardiac nerves we used gp130(DBH-Cre/lox) mice, which have a deletion of the gp130 receptor in neurons expressing dopamine beta-hydroxylase. The absence of neuronal gp130 prevented the loss of tyrosine hydroxylase in cardiac sympathetic nerves innervating the left ventricle 1 week after ischaemia-reperfusion compared with wild-type C57BL/6J mice. Surprisingly, restoration of tyrosine hydroxylase in the damaged ventricle did not return neuronal NA content to normal levels. Noradrenaline uptake into cardiac nerves was significantly lower in gp130 knockout mice, contributing to the lack of neuronal NA stores. There were no significant differences in left ventricular peak systolic pressure, dP/dt(max) or dP/dt(min) between the two genotypes after myocardial infarction, but ganglionic blockade revealed differences in autonomic tone between the genotypes. Stimulation of the heart with dobutamine or release of endogenous NA with tyramine generated similar responses in both genotypes. Thus, the removal of gp130 from sympathetic neurons prevents the post-infarct depletion of tyrosine hydroxylase in the left ventricle, but does not alter NA content or cardiac function.
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PMID:Infarction-induced cytokines cause local depletion of tyrosine hydroxylase in cardiac sympathetic nerves. 1988 May 37

In severe congestive heart failure (CHF), sympathetic overactivity correlates with the exacerbation of cardiac performance. To test the hypothesis that the cardiac sympathetic nerve density dramatically changes with the acceleration of circulating norepinephrine (NE) concentration, we investigated the temporal association of nerve growth factor (NGF) expression in the heart and cardiac sympathetic nerve density during the development of CHF in the continuous NE-infused rats. The animals were analyzed at 0-, 1-, 3-, 7-, 14-, and 28-day after implantation of osmotic pump at a rate of 0.05 mg/kg/hr. The cardiac performance was temporally facilitated in NE-exposed rats at 3-day in accordance with the sympathetic hyper-innervation induced by the augmentation of NGF mRNA expression in the heart. In NE-treated rats, left ventricular end-diastolic pressure was significantly increased after 7-day and marked left ventricular hypertrophy and systemic fluid retention were observed at 28-day. CHF-induced sympathetic overactivity further increased plasma NE concentration in NE-treated rats and finally reached to 16.1+/-5.6 ng/ml at 28-day (control level was 0.39+/-0.1 ng/ml, p<0.01). In the decompensated CHF rats at 28-day, the NGF mRNA expression was conspicuously reduced concomitant with the obvious nerve fiber loss confirmed by the immunostaining of nerve axonal marker, PGP9.5 and sympathetic neuron marker, tyrosine hydroxylase. This resulted in the attenuated tissue NE contents and the exacerbating cardiac performance. The cardiac sympathetic fiber loss was also confirmed in NE-exposed DBH (dopamine beta-hydroxylase)-Cre/Floxed-EGFP (enhanced green fluorescent protein) mice with severe CHF, in which sympathetic nerve could be traced by EGFP. Our results suggest that the cardiac sympathetic nerve density is strictly regulated by the NGF expression in the heart and long-exposure of high plasma NE concentration caused myocardial NGF reduction, following sympathetic fiber loss in severe CHF animals.
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PMID:Norepinephrine-induced nerve growth factor depletion causes cardiac sympathetic denervation in severe heart failure. 2033 77


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