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Enzyme
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Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Query: EC:3.4.24.64 (
MPP
)
1,876
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The present study examined the combined effect of dopamine and 1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium (
MPP
(+)) on the membrane permeability in isolated brain mitochondria and on cell viability in PC12 cells.
MPP
(+) increased effect of dopamine against the swelling, membrane potential, and Ca(2+) transport in isolated mitochondria, which was not inhibited by the addition of antioxidant enzymes (SOD and catalase). Dopamine or
MPP
(+) caused the decrease in transmembrane potential, increase in reactive oxygen species, depletion of GSH, and cell death in PC12 cells. Antioxidant enzymes reduced each effect of dopamine and
MPP
(+) against PC12 cells. Co-addition of dopamine and
MPP
(+) caused the decrease in the transmembrane potential and increase in the formation of reactive oxygen species in PC12 cells, in which they showed an additive effect. Dopamine plus
MPP
(+)-induced the depletion of GSH and cell death in PC12 cells were not decreased by the addition of antioxidant enzymes, rutin, diethylstilbestrol, and ascorbate. Melanin caused a cell viability loss in PC12 cells. The N-acetylcysteine,
N-phenylthiourea
, and 5-hydroxyindole decreased the cell death and the formation of dopamine quinone and melanin induced by co-addition of dopamine and
MPP
(+), whereas deprenyl and chlorgyline did not show an inhibitory effect. The results suggest that co-addition of dopamine and
MPP
(+) shows an enhancing effect on the change in mitochondrial membrane permeability and cell death, which may be accomplished by toxic quinone and melanin derived from the
MPP
(+)-stimulated dopamine oxidation.
...
PMID:Combined effect of dopamine and MPP+ on membrane permeability in mitochondria and cell viability in PC12 cells. 1262 Feb 83