Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0013421 (dystonia)
8,418 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Although the gene defect responsible for Huntington disease (HD) has recently been identified, the pathogenesis of the disease remains obscure. One potential mechanism is that the gene defect may lead to an impairment of energy metabolism followed by slow excitotoxic neuronal injury. In the present study we examined whether chronic administration of 3-nitropropionic acid (3-NP), an irreversible inhibitor of succinate dehydrogenase, can replicate the neuropathologic and clinical features of HD in nonhuman primates. After 3-6 weeks of 3-NP administration, apomorphine treatment induced a significant increase in motor activity as compared with saline-treated controls. Animals showed both choreiform movements, as well as foot and limb dystonia, which are characteristic of HD. More prolonged 3-NP treatment in two additional primates resulted in spontaneous dystonia and dyskinesia accompanied by lesions in the caudate and putamen seen by magnetic resonance imaging. Histologic evaluation showed that there was a depletion of calbindin neurons, astrogliosis, sparing of NADPH-diaphorase neurons, and growth-related proliferative changes in dendrites of spiny neurons similar to changes in HD. The striosomal organization of the striatum and the nucleus accumbens were spared. These findings show that chronic administration of 3-NP to nonhuman primates can replicate many of the characteristic motor and histologic features of HD, further strengthening the possibility that a subtle impairment of energy metabolism may play a role in its pathogenesis.
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PMID:Chronic mitochondrial energy impairment produces selective striatal degeneration and abnormal choreiform movements in primates. 762 78

Tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) is synthesized from guanosine triphosphate (GTP) by GTP cyclohydrolase I (GCH), 6-pyruvoyltetrahydropterin synthase (PTS), and sepiapterin reductase (SPD). GCH is the rate-limiting enzyme. BH4 is a cofactor for three pteridine-requiring monooxygenases that hydroxylate aromatic L-amino acids, i.e., tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), tryptophan hydroxylase (TPH), and phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH), as well as for nitric oxide synthase (NOS). The intracellular concentrations of BH4, which are mainly determined by GCH activity, may regulate the activity of TH (an enzyme-synthesizing catecholamines from tyrosine), TPH (an enzyme-synthesizing serotonin and melatonin from tryptophan), PAH (an enzyme required for complete degradation of phenylalanine to tyrosine, finally to CO2 + H2O), and also the activity of NOS (an enzyme forming NO from arginine), Dominantly inherited hereditary progressive dystonia (HPD), also termed DOPA-responsive dystonia (DRD) or Segawa's disease, is a dopamine deficiency in the nigrostriatal dopamine neurons, and is caused by mutations of one allele of the GCH gene. GCH activity and BH4 concentrations in HPD/DRD are estimated to be 2-20% of the normal value. By contrast, recessively inherited GCH deficiency is caused by mutations of both alleles of the GCH gene, and the GCH activity and BH4 concentrations are undetectable. The phenotypes of recessive GCH deficiency are severe and complex, such as hyperphenylalaninemia, muscle hypotonia, epilepsy, and fever episode, and may be caused by deficiencies of various neurotransmitters, including dopamine, norepinephrine, serotonin, and NO. The biosynthesis of dopamine, norepinephrine, epinephrine, serotonin, melatonin, and probably NO by individual pteridine-requiring enzymes may be differentially regulated by the intracellular concentration of BH4, which is mainly determined by GCH activity. Dopamine biosynthesis in different groups of dopamine neurons may be differentially regulated by TH activity, depending on intracellular BH4 concentrations and GCH activity. The nigrostriatal dopamine neurons may be most susceptible to a partial decrease in BH4, causing dopamine deficiency in the striatum and the HPD/DRD phenotype.
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PMID:Regulation of pteridine-requiring enzymes by the cofactor tetrahydrobiopterin. 1032 73

Tetrahydrobiopterin (BH(4)) cofactor is essential for various processes, and is present in probably every cell or tissue of higher organisms. BH(4) is required for various enzyme activities, and for less defined functions at the cellular level. The pathway for the de novo biosynthesis of BH(4) from GTP involves GTP cyclohydrolase I, 6-pyruvoyl-tetrahydropterin synthase and sepiapterin reductase. Cofactor regeneration requires pterin-4a-carbinolamine dehydratase and dihydropteridine reductase. Based on gene cloning, recombinant expression, mutagenesis studies, structural analysis of crystals and NMR studies, reaction mechanisms for the biosynthetic and recycling enzymes were proposed. With regard to the regulation of cofactor biosynthesis, the major controlling point is GTP cyclohydrolase I, the expression of which may be under the control of cytokine induction. In the liver at least, activity is inhibited by BH(4), but stimulated by phenylalanine through the GTP cyclohydrolase I feedback regulatory protein. The enzymes that depend on BH(4) are the phenylalanine, tyrosine and tryptophan hydroxylases, the latter two being the rate-limiting enzymes for catecholamine and 5-hydroxytryptamine (serotonin) biosynthesis, all NO synthase isoforms and the glyceryl-ether mono-oxygenase. On a cellular level, BH(4) has been found to be a growth or proliferation factor for Crithidia fasciculata, haemopoietic cells and various mammalian cell lines. In the nervous system, BH(4) is a self-protecting factor for NO, or a general neuroprotecting factor via the NO synthase pathway, and has neurotransmitter-releasing function. With regard to human disease, BH(4) deficiency due to autosomal recessive mutations in all enzymes (except sepiapterin reductase) have been described as a cause of hyperphenylalaninaemia. Furthermore, several neurological diseases, including Dopa-responsive dystonia, but also Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, autism and depression, have been suggested to be a consequence of restricted cofactor availability.
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PMID:Tetrahydrobiopterin biosynthesis, regeneration and functions. 1072 95

In a hamster model (genetic symbol dt(sz)) of primary paroxysmal non-kinesiogenic dystonic choreoathetosis, recent studies have shown beneficial effects of glutamate and dopamine receptor antagonists. Nitric oxide (NO), synthesized from L-arginine by NO synthase in response to glutamate receptor activation, elicits cyclic GMP and modulates glutamate-mediated processes and striatal dopamine release. Therefore, the effects of NO synthase inhibitors and of L-arginine on severity of dystonia were investigated in dt(sz) hamsters in which dystonic attacks, characterized by twisting movements and postures, can be induced by stress. The NO synthase inhibitors N(G)-nitro-L-arginine (L-NNA), N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME) and 7-nitroindazole significantly reduced the severity of dystonia. At antidystonic effective doses neither L-NNA nor L-NAME caused observable side effects, whereas 7-nitroindazole exerted moderate reduction of locomotor activity. The antidystonic effect of L-NAME was reversed by co-administration of the NO precursor L-arginine. However, L-arginine administered alone did not exert any effect on severity of dystonia. Cerebellar cyclic GMP levels in brains of mutant hamsters in comparison to non-dystonic control hamsters did not significantly differ, but the cerebellar cyclic GMP levels tended to be increased in dt(sz) hamsters during a dystonic attack. L-NAME significantly decreased the cerebellar cyclic GMP levels in both dt(sz) and control hamsters. Although an overproduction of NO is probably not critically involved in the pathogenesis of paroxysmal dystonia, it may contribute to the manifestation of dystonic attacks, as indicated by the antidystonic effects of NO synthase inhibitors. Peripheral side effects may limit the clinical use of NO synthase inhibitors, but more selective inhibitors of the neuronal NO synthase should be considered as interesting candidates for the treatment of paroxysmal dystonia.
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PMID:Antidystonic efficacy of nitric oxide synthase inhibitors in a rodent model of primary paroxysmal dystonia. 1105 12

DOPA responsive dystonia (DRD) and sepiapterin reductase (SR) deficiency are inherited disorders of tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) metabolism characterized by the signs and symptoms related to monoamine neurotransmitter deficiency. In contrast to classical forms of BH4 deficiency DRD and SR deficiency present without hyperphenylalaninemia and thus cannot be detected by the neonatal screening for phenylketonuria (PKU). While DRD is mostly caused by autosomal dominant mutations in the GTP cyclohydrolase I gene (GCH1), SR deficiency is an autosomal recessive disease. The most important biochemical investigations for the diagnosis of these neurological diseases includes CSF investigations for neurotransmitter metabolites and pterins as well as neopterin and biopterin production in cytokine-stimulated fibroblasts. Discovery of SR deficiency opened new insights into alternative pathways of the cofactor BH4 via carbonyl, aldose, and dihydrofolate reductases. As a consequence of the low dihydrofolate reductase activity in the brain, dihydrobiopterin intermediate accumulates and inhibits tyrosine and tryptophan hydroxylases and uncouples nitric oxide synthase (nNOS), leading to neurotransmitter deficiency and possibly also to neuronal cell death.
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PMID:Tetrahydrobiopterin deficiencies without hyperphenylalaninemia: diagnosis and genetics of dopa-responsive dystonia and sepiapterin reductase deficiency. 1159 14

Data about the role of nitric oxide (NO) in epileptogenesis are contradictory. It is found to exert both proconvulsant and anticonvulsant effects. In an attempt to elucidate the role of NO in seizures, male Wistar rats were treated intraperitoneally by pentylenetetrazol (PTZ) (60, 80, and 100 mg/kg) and by a nitric oxide synthase antagonist, N-omega-nitro-L-arginine-methyl-ester (L-NAME) (10, 40, and 70 mg/kg), applied before PTZ. The time to onset and incidence of forelimb dystonia (FLD), generalized clonic convulsions (GCC), clonic-tonic convulsions (CTC), and mortality were recorded. The most successful convulsive response and mortality prevention were found in PTZ (80 mg/kg)-treated groups, where L-NAME (70 mg/kg) decreased the incidence by 29, 50, 67 (p = 0.052), and 50%, respectively, and significantly prolonged the time to onset, except that for mortality. Unexpectedly, L-NAME (40 mg/kg) increased incidence of GCC and mortality by 16%, similar to L-NAME (10 mg/kg) in PTZ (60 mg/kg)-treated groups, where GCC, CTC, and mortality increased by 14, 14, and 28%, respectively. Convulsive latency was prolonged in some PTZ (100 mg/kg) + L-NAME (40 and 70 mg/kg)-treated groups. In the experimental model and protocol used, it is concluded that (1) the effects of NO are L-NAME- and PTZ-dose dependent; (2) clonic-tonic convulsions are more strongly influenced by NO than limbic, probably because of PTZ limbic structure overstimulation; (3) L-NAME decreases the incidence of CTC and prolongs FLD, GCC, and CTC times to onset, indicating that NO acts as a proconvulsant; and (3) increased GCC, CTC, and mortality that suggests an anticonvulsant effect of NO needs further investigation.
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PMID:Nitric oxide (NO) and convulsions induced by pentylenetetrazol. 1207 82

GTP cyclohydrolase I (GTPCHI) is the rate-limiting enzyme involved in the biosynthesis of tetrahydrobiopterin, a key cofactor necessary for nitric oxide synthase and for the hydroxylases that are involved in the production of catecholamines and serotonin. In animals, the GTPCHI feedback regulatory protein (GFRP) binds GTPCHI to mediate feed-forward activation of GTPCHI activity in the presence of phenylalanine, whereas it induces feedback inhibition of enzyme activity in the presence of biopterin. Here, we have reported the crystal structure of the biopterin-induced inhibitory complex of GTPCHI and GFRP and compared it with the previously reported phenylalanine-induced stimulatory complex. The structure reveals five biopterin molecules located at each interface between GTPCHI and GFRP. Induced fitting structural changes by the biopterin binding expand large conformational changes in GTPCHI peptide segments forming the active site, resulting in inhibition of the activity. By locating 3,4-dihydroxy-phenylalanine-responsive dystonia mutations in the complex structure, we found mutations that may possibly disturb the GFRP-mediated regulation of GTPCHI.
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PMID:Structural basis of biopterin-induced inhibition of GTP cyclohydrolase I by GFRP, its feedback regulatory protein. 1544 33

The hph-1 mice have defective tetrahydrobiopterin biosynthesis and share many neurochemical similarities with l-dopa-responsive dystonia (DRD) in humans. In both, there are deficiencies in GTP cyclohydrolase I and low brain levels of dopamine (DA). Striatal tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) levels are decreased while the number of DA neurones in substantia nigra (SN) appears normal. The hph-1 mouse is therefore a useful model in which to investigate the biochemical mechanisms underlying dystonia in DRD. In the present study, the density of striatal DA terminals and DA receptors and the expression of D-1, D-2, and D-3 receptors, preproenkephalin (PPE-A), preprotachykinin (PPT), and nitric oxide synthase (NOS) mRNAs in the striatum and nucleus accumbens and nigral TH mRNA expression were examined. Striatal DA terminal density as judged by specific [3H]mazindol binding was not altered while the levels of TH mRNA were elevated in the SN of hph-1 mice compared to control (C57BL) mice. Total and subregional analysis of the striatum and nucleus accumbens showed that D-2 receptor ([3H]spiperone) binding density was increased while D-1 receptor ([3H]SCH 23390) and D-3 receptor ([3H]7-OH-DPAT) binding density was not altered. In the striatum and nucleus accumbens, expression of PPT mRNA was elevated but PPE-A mRNA, D-1, D-2 receptor, and nNOS mRNA were not changed in hph-1 mice compared to controls. These findings suggest that an imbalance between the direct strionigral and indirect striopallidal output pathways may be relevant to the genesis of DRD. However, the pattern of changes observed is not that expected as a result of striatal dopamine deficiency and suggests that other effects of GTP cyclohydrolase I deficiency may be involved.
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PMID:Alterations in expression of dopamine receptors and neuropeptides in the striatum of GTP cyclohydrolase-deficient mice. 1553 Aug 90

The dt(sz) mutant hamster represents a model of paroxysmal dyskinesia in which dystonic episodes can be age-dependently induced by stress. GABAergic interneurones which co-express calcium binding proteins were found to be reduced in the striatum of the dt(sz) mutant. Other types of striatal interneurones have so far not been examined. In the present study, we therefore determined the density of nitric oxide synthase (NOS)-immunoreactive interneurones in the striatum of the dt(sz) mutant in comparison with nondystonic control hamsters. At the age of most marked expression of dystonia (30-40 days of life), the density of NOS-positive interneurones was decreased in the striatum of dt(sz) hamsters (-21%) in comparison with age-matched nondystonic control hamsters. Spontaneous remission of dystonia (age >90 days) coincided with a normalization of the density of NOS-reactive interneurones within the whole striatum of dt(sz) hamsters, but there remained a reduced density in distinct subregions. Together with previous findings the present data indicate that the development of striatal interneurones is retarded in mutant hamsters. The age-related deficit of NOS-reactive interneurones may at least in part contribute to an abnormal activity of striatal GABAergic projection neurones and thereby to the age-dependent dystonic syndrome in the dt(sz) mutant.
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PMID:Age-related changes in striatal nitric oxide synthase-immunoreactive interneurones in the dystonic dtsz mutant hamster. 1640 55

Primary dystonia is a common movement disorder with an unknown pathophysiology, but basal ganglia dysfunctions seem to play a critical role. Previous studies in the dtsz mutant hamster, an animal model of primary paroxysmal dystonia, demonstrated a deficit of striatal gamma-amino-butyric acid (GABA) containing interneurons, which normalized at the age of the spontaneous remission of the symptoms. Whereas the reduction of striatal parvalbumin-reactive interneurons is thought to be critically involved in the pathogenesis of dystonia in the hamster mutant, the impact of a reduced density of nitric oxide synthase (NOS) reactive interneurons within the striatum is still unclear. Beside GABA, these interneurons contain somatostatin, neuropeptide Y, nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate-diaphorase (NADPH-d) and neuronal NOS, an enzyme which produces NO after the activation of the interneurons. In order to clarify if the reduced density of NOS-reactive interneurons contributes by an altered striatal production of nitric oxide (NO) to the occurrence of dystonic attacks in the hamster mutant, we performed microinjections of the NOS inhibitors 7-nitroindazole (7-NI) and Nomega-propyl-L-arginine (NPLA) and of the precursor of NO, L-arginine, into the striata of dtsz hamsters. Neither 7-NI (0.1 and 0.4 microg per hemisphere) and NPLA (2.5, 5 and 7.5 microg per hemisphere) nor L-arginine (9 and 18 microg per hemisphere) exerted any effects on the severity of dystonic movements in the dtsz mutant. Therefore, a critical involvement of striatal changes of NO in the pathophysiology of dystonic attacks in the dtsz hamster cannot be confirmed by the results of these pharmacological examinations. In view of the ontogenetic reduction of the other types of GABAergic interneurons, the deficit of NOS-reactive interneurons is possibly due to the same underlying unknown mechanism, but is less important for the pathophysiology of primary paroxysmal dystonia in the dtsz hamster mutant.
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PMID:Striatal microinjections of nitric oxide synthase inhibitors and L-arginine fail to exert effects on paroxysmal dystonia in the dtsz mutant. 1642 62


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