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Query: EC:1.14.16.2 (
tyrosine hydroxylase
)
14,760
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Salsolinol is one of the dopamine-derived tetrahydroisoquinolines and is synthesized from pyruvate or
acetaldehyde
and dopamine. As it cannot cross the blood-brain barrier, salsolinol as the R enantiomer in the brain is considered to be synthesized in situ in dopaminergic neurons. Effects of R and S enantiomers of salsolinol on kinetic properties of
tyrosine hydroxylase
[tyrosine, tetrahydrobiopterin:oxygen oxidoreductase (3-hydroxylating);
EC 1.14.16.2
], the rate-limiting enzyme of catecholamine biosynthesis, were examined. The naturally occurring cofactor of
tyrosine hydroxylase
, L-erythro-5,6,7,8-tetrahydrobiopterin, was found to induce allostery to the enzyme polymers and to change the affinity to the biopterin itself. Using L-erythro-5,6,7,8-tetrahydrobiopterin,
tyrosine hydroxylase
recognized the stereochemical structures of the salsolinols differently. The asymmetric center of salsolinol at C-1 played an important role in changing the affinity to L-tyrosine. The allostery of
tyrosine hydroxylase
toward biopterin cofactors disappeared, and at low concentrations of biopterin such as in brain tissue, the affinity to the cofactor changed markedly. A new type of inhibition of
tyrosine hydroxylase
, by depleting the allosteric effect of the endogenous biopterin, was found. It is suggested that under physiological conditions, such a conformational change may alter the regulation of DOPA biosynthesis in the brain.
...
PMID:Inhibition of tyrosine hydroxylase by R and S enantiomers of salsolinol, 1-methyl-6,7-dihydroxy-1,2,3,4-tetrahydroisoquinoline. 134 43
The possible involvement of catecholamines (CA) in the mediation of
acetaldehyde
's conditioned taste aversion (CTA) was examined by testing the effects of alpha-methyl-para-tyrosine (AMPT, a
tyrosine hydroxylase
inhibitor) on the CTAs produced by
acetaldehyde
. AMPT blocked the acquisition of the CTA normally produced by a low dose of
acetaldehyde
(0.2 g/kg), but had no significant effect on CTA produced by a high dose of
acetaldehyde
(0.3 g/kg). In a second study,
acetaldehyde
's role in the CTA produced by ethanol was investigated using the pre-exposure conditioned taste aversion paradigm. Pre-exposure to
acetaldehyde
(both doses) blocked the ethanol CTAs but when pre-exposure with
acetaldehyde
was coupled with AMPT, only the larger dose of
acetaldehyde
blocked the ethanol aversion. These results suggest that while the CTA to the low dose of
acetaldehyde
may be primarily central and catecholamine-mediated, the mechanism underlying the high dose CTA is probably peripheral and emetic in nature. These findings support the conclusion that
acetaldehyde
may be mediating many of the actions of ethanol.
...
PMID:Ethanol-induced CTA mediated by acetaldehyde through central catecholamine activity. 167 62
Immunoreactivity for the neurofilament protein triplet was investigated in neurons of the dorsal root ganglia of the guinea-pig by using a battery of antibodies. In unfixed tissue, nearly all neurons in these ganglia demonstrated some degree of neurofilament protein triplet immunoreactivity. Large neurons generally displayed intense immunoreactivity, whereas most small to medium-sized neurons showed faint to moderate immunoreactivity. Double-labelling immunofluorescence demonstrated that most antibodies to the individual subunits of the neurofilament protein triplet had the same distribution and intensity of labelling in sensory neurons. Increasing durations of tissue fixation in
aldehyde
solutions selectively diminished neurofilament protein triplet immunoreactivity in small to medium-sized neurons. Double-labelling with neurofilament protein triplet antibodies in combination with antibodies to other neuronal markers, such as neuron-specific enolase, substance P and
tyrosine hydroxylase
, showed that tissue processing conditions affect the degree of co-localization of immunoreactivity to the neurofilament protein triplet and to these other neuronal markers. These results indicate that, with a judicious manipulation of the duration of tissue fixation, neurofilament protein triplet immunoreactivity can be used in combination with other neuronal markers to distinguish groups of neurons according to their size and chemical coding.
...
PMID:Neurofilament protein triplet immunoreactivity in the dorsal root ganglia of the guinea-pig. 171 54
Although a well-developed plexus of nerves and ganglia is known to be present in the wall of the gallbladder, little has previously been learned about the function or organization of this innervation. The current study was undertaken in order to evaluate the hypothesis that the ganglionated plexus of the gallbladder is analogous to elements of the enteric nervous system (ENS). The ganglionated plexus of the gallbladder was found to resemble closely the submucosal plexus of the small intestine in its organization into two irregular anastomosing and interwoven networks of ganglia, in the numbers of neurons per ganglion, and in the manifestation of histochemically demonstrable acetylcholinesterase activity in virtually all ganglion cells. In common with enteric ganglia, laminin immunoreactivity was observed to be excluded from the interiors of gallbladder ganglia, which were surrounded by a periganglionic laminin-immunoreactive sheath. As in the submucosal plexus, intrinsic substance P-, vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP)-, and neuropeptide Y (NPY)-immunoreactive neurons were seen in the ganglionated plexus of the gallbladder. Extrinsic nerves in the gallbladder that degenerated following chemical sympathectomy with 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA), and which contained NPY,
tyrosine hydroxylase
(TH), and dopamine-beta-hydroxylase (DBH) immunoreactivities, formed a perivascular plexus closely associated with blood vessels. Endogenous catecholamines could also be demonstrated in these perivascular nerves by
aldehyde
-induced histofluorescence. In addition to perivascular nerves, paravascular nerve bundles were observed that were loosely associated with vessels, did not degenerate following administration of 6-OHDA, and contained NPY immunoreactivity. Other paravascular nerves, probably visceral sensory axons, coexpressed substance P and calcitonin-gene-related peptide (CGRP) immunoreactivities. The ganglionated plexus of the gallbladder resembled enteric ganglia in having intrinsic 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT)-immunoreactive cells and highly varicose nerve fibers. The 5-HT-immunoreactive gallbladder axons were, like those of the gut, resistant to 6-OHDA, and separate from fibers that expressed TH immunoreactivity. Differences between the ganglionated plexus of the gallbladder and enteric ganglia of the small intestine included in the gallbladder are 1) the presence of TH-immunoreactive cells that contain an endogenous catecholamine, but not DBH; 2) DBH-immunoreactive neurons, some of which coexpress substance P immunoreactivity, but which contain neither a catecholamine nor TH immunoreactivity; 3) an apparent absence of CGRP-immunoreactive cell bodies.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Structure, afferent innervation, and transmitter content of ganglia of the guinea pig gallbladder: relationship to the enteric nervous system. 256 71
We have previously reported that ethanol and
acetaldehyde
potentiate 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP) neurotoxicity in mice, enhancing dopamine (DA) depletion in the striatum. The present study was designed to determine whether such enhancement of neurotoxicity was specific for the nigro-striatal DA pathway. In 5-week-old mice
acetaldehyde
treatment did not enhance DA depletion seen 7 days after MPTP treatment. In 8-week-old animals, however,
acetaldehyde
or ethanol given with MPTP decreased striatal DA content to about 10% of controls, whereas the depletion was to 43% of controls when MPTP was given alone. In
acetaldehyde
or ethanol and MPTP-treated mice, changes in DA levels were observed only in the striatum. DA contents in the hypothalamus, olfactory bulb and frontal cortex were similar to that in controls. Contents of norepinephrine and serotonin in striatum, hypothalamus, olfactory bulb and cerebral cortex were not affected by any of the treatments. Three months after MPTP alone, striatal DA recovered to 74% of controls in 8-week-old mice, whereas no recovery occurred in
acetaldehyde
and MPTP-treated mice. Moreover, both
tyrosine hydroxylase
(TH) immunocytochemistry and Cresyl violet staining showed an extensive and selective cell loss in the pars compacta of the substantia nigra (SNc) of the mice treated with
acetaldehyde
or ethanol and MPTP, whereas MPTP alone caused only a limited cell degeneration.
...
PMID:MPTP treatment combined with ethanol or acetaldehyde selectively destroys dopaminergic neurons in mouse substantia nigra. 257 5
The present study examines the distribution and morphological characteristics of neurons containing immunoreactivity of
tyrosine hydroxylase
in the cat hypothalamus. We used the indirect immunoperoxidase technique on vibratome sections. Tyrosine hydroxylase-immunoreactive cell bodies were widely distributed in discrete regions of the cat hypothalamus. Several principal cell groups were identified. They were seen in the posterior and dorsal hypothalamic areas, zona incerta, dorsomedial and lateral hypothalamic areas, arcuate nucleus, periventricular nucleus, paraventricular nucleus, and an area of the tuber cinereum and preoptic area. These cells presented two different morphological characteristics; small with two to three short processes and medium to large, multipolar with three to five long dendritic trees. The atlas is presented in twelve cross-sectional drawings of the cat hypothalamus from the level A8.5 to A15 of the Horsley-Clarke stereotaxic planes. We also examined the distribution of hypothalamic catecholamine fluorescent neurons by using the aqueous
aldehyde
method in combination with glyoxylic acid applied to vibratome sectioned tissues, which improves sensitivity. Comments are made on the relative localizations of the
tyrosine hydroxylase
-immunoreactive and
aldehyde
-induced histofluorescent cells, as well as on species differences between the cat, rat, and mouse.
...
PMID:Localization of tyrosine hydroxylase-immunoreactive neurons in the cat hypothalamus, with special reference to fluorescence histochemistry. 288 55
The morphology, number and distribution of catecholaminergic neurons, as visualized either with the aluminum-catalysed formaldehyde method for catecholamines or with the immunohistochemical method for the catecholamine-synthesizing enzymes
tyrosine hydroxylase
and aromatic L-amino acid decarboxylase, respectively, were analysed within the rat dorsal hypothalamus, ventral thalamus and adjoining regions (A11 and A13 cell groups). Both polyclonal rabbit and monoclonal mouse
tyrosine hydroxylase
antibodies were used in elution-restaining and double-staining experiments, respectively. Some of the animals also received spinal injections of the fluorescent tracer True Blue in order to retrogradely label cells projecting to the spinal cord. With respect to the number and distribution of catecholaminergic neurons in the A11 and medial A13 cell groups, including the spinal-projecting subpopulation, the results obtained with the two methods were very similar, indicating that within these regions of the CNS the two methods in principle visualize identical cell populations. However, the catecholaminergic cells were distinctly larger and their processes appeared more extensive with the immunohistochemical method. Animals processed for immunohistochemistry exhibited a lower total number of retrogradely labelled cells in the A11 area than those analysed with
aldehyde
-induced fluorescence despite the fact that both methods revealed similar numbers of retrogradely labelled
tyrosine hydroxylase
-positive and catecholamine-containing cells, respectively. The reason for these discrepancies, which are probably of methodological nature, are discussed. While this study shows that the results obtained with the two methods within the A11 and medial A13 cell group are very similar and thus strengthens the earlier proposed concept of the organization of the diencephalospinal dopaminergic system, it also documents that in intermingling and nearby CNS regions there are cell bodies which cannot be demonstrated with the
aldehyde
fluorescence method, but which still contain
tyrosine hydroxylase
and/or aromatic L-amino acid decarboxylase-like immunoreactivity. One explanation is low levels of enzyme and/or dopamine combined with a comparatively low sensitivity of the histochemical method. Thus, neurons containing both enzymes are probably dopaminergic, even if catecholamine fluorescence cannot be demonstrated. Neurons containing
tyrosine hydroxylase
, but lacking both
aldehyde
induced fluorescence and aromatic L-amino acid decarboxylase, may also still be dopaminergic.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Studies on dopamine-, tyrosine hydroxylase- and aromatic L-amino acid decarboxylase-containing cells in the rat diencephalon: comparison between formaldehyde-induced histofluorescence and immunofluorescence. 289 14
The autofluorescent serotonin analogue 5,7-dihydroxytryptamine (5,7-DHT) was used to identify living catecholaminergic neurons in monolayer cultures derived from the embryonic rat mesencephalon. A high correlation between 5,7-DHT accumulation and
aldehyde
-induced catecholamine fluorescence as well as
tyrosine hydroxylase
but not dopamine-beta-hydroxylase or phenylethanolamine-N-methyltransferase immunoreactivity was found. This indicates that these cells were dopamine-containing neurons. Whole-cell patch recordings showed that all mesencephalic neurons had resting membrane potentials of -50 mV or greater and input resistances ranging between 200 and 700 M omega and exhibited spontaneous action potentials and postsynaptic potentials. The duration of the action potential of the dopamine-containing neurons was characteristically longer than that of the non-dopamine-containing mesencephalic cells. In some dopamine-containing neurons, repolarization of the action potential was clearly biphasic, and the slow phase of repolarization was reversibly blocked by local application of Cd2+ or Co2+. This "shoulder" in the action potential was never observed in non-dopamine-containing neurons, where Cd2+ or Co2+ application was always without effect. It is concluded that 5,7-DHT can be used to identify living dopamine-containing neurons in dissociated mesencephalic cultures and these neurons express distinct electrical properties.
...
PMID:5,7-Dihydroxytryptamine identifies living dopaminergic neurons in mesencephalic cultures. 305 Sep 94
Immunocytochemical evidence is presented for the existence of choline acetyltransferase (ChoAcTase), cysteine sulfinic acid decarboxylase (CSADCase),
tyrosine hydroxylase
(TyrOHase), and glutamic acid decarboxylase (GluDCase) in large motor neurons of the hypoglossal nucleus and the spinal cord and in nerve terminals of motor end plates in tongue and skeletal muscle of five mammalian species, including man. These enzymes, which are responsible for the synthesis of acetylcholine (AcCho), taurine, dopamine, and gamma-aminobutyrate (GABA), respectively, were detected by immunocytochemical studies with monoclonal or polyclonal antibodies raised against the enzymes. Electron microscopy of the neuromuscular junctions showed that the immunoreactivity in each case was confined to the cytoplasmic matrix of presynaptic nerve terminals. Immunoreactivity obtained for each enzyme antibody varied with the species. It was highest in fresh, unfixed muscle and lowest in
aldehyde
-fixed specimens. Negative controls were obtained with preimmune sera and antisera preabsorbed with pure ChoAcTase, CSADCase, or GluDCase antigen. Double-labeling studies with ChoAcTase antibodies and acetylcholinesterase (AcChoEase) antibodies, AcChoEase enzyme activity, or alpha-bungarotoxin binding indicated that ChoAcTase, AcChoEase, and AcCho receptors were colocalized at the same end plates.
...
PMID:Synthesizing enzymes for four neuroactive substances in motor neurons and neuromuscular junctions: light and electron microscopic immunocytochemistry. 612 35
This study provides evidence of catecholaminergic neurons in the cranial division of the parasympathetic nervous system. Presumptive catecholaminergic preganglionic neurons in the dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus (DMX) were revealed by a clearcut depletion of intracellular catecholamine-synthesizing enzyme immunoreactivity induced by unilateral cervical vagotomy and identified on tissues immunocytochemically processed for
tyrosine hydroxylase
(TH), dopamine beta-hydroxylase (D beta H) or phenylethanolamine N-methyltransferase (PNMT). This experimental design was essential because of the recent failure in two species to reproduce data previously obtained in double-label (combined immunocytochemical-retrograde transport) studies. Vagotomy data confirmed three spatially-segregated populations of catecholaminergic visceromotor neurons in the DMX. These cell bodies were morphologically identical to preganglionic neurons observed on alternate tissues stained for Nissl substance or immunostained for choline acetyltransferase (ChAT), the enzyme biosynthesizing acetylcholine. Neurons in the central and medial DMX demonstrated fall-off of TH-like immunoreactivity (LI) ipsilateral to the vagotomy at levels caudal to the obex. This cell group is assumed to be predominantly dopaminergic since relatively few neurons at this level of the DMX expressed D beta H-LI and none were immunostained for PNMT. A second population of immunoreactive neurons, concentrated in the rostral-lateral region of the DMX, was depleted of D beta H-LI on the ipsilateral side but did not express PNMT. These visceromotor neurons may, therefore, biosynthesize noradrenaline and belong to the rostral pole of the A2 area. A third population of presumptive adrenergic vagal dorsomotor neurons in the rostral-medial DMX was depleted of TH-, D beta H- and PNMT-LI at levels of the ipsilateral nucleus anterior to obex. Patterns of depletion of cytoplasmic enzyme-immunoreaction product were identical in all cases irrespective of the site of the transection or the postoperative survival period. Quantitative analysis demonstrated statistically significant loss of immunolabeled neurons in rostral and caudal subgroups of the DMX on the side ipsilateral to the vagotomy. It is concluded that catecholaminergic processes in the vagus nerve, as previously identified by the
aldehyde
-induced histofluorescence method, may partly arise from the lower brainstem.
...
PMID:Effect of cervical vagotomy on catecholaminergic neurons in the cranial division of the parasympathetic nervous system. 837 39
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