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Query: UMLS:C0030567 (
Parkinson's disease
)
63,064
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
6R-L-erythro-5, 6, 7, 8-Tetrahydrobiopterin (6R-BH4) is known as a cofactor for the hydroxylases of
phenylalanine
, tyrosine and tryptophan and also as a cofactor for nitric oxide synthase. Recently, a novel function of 6R-BH4 has been found: that is, 6R-BH4 acts on specific membrane receptors to directly stimulate the release of monamine neurotransmitters such as dopamine and serotonin, independently of its cofactor activity. In addition, it indirectly stimulates the release of non-monoamine neurotransmitters such as acetylcholine and glutamate, through activation of monoaminergic systems. In this paper, we briefly review recent experimental data, which provide new insights into the role of 6R-BH4 as a regulator of neuronal function. We also discuss the possibility of treatment by 6R-BH4 of neuropsychiatric diseases such as
Parkinson's disease
, Alzheimer's disease, depression and infantile autism.
...
PMID:[A novel function of tetrahydrobiopterin]. 136 Nov 76
The binding properties of mu and delta opioid receptors were investigated in several areas of human brain by using [3H]Tyr-D-Ala-Gly-(Me)
Phe
-Gly-ol and [3H]Tyr-D-Thr-Gly-
Phe
-Leu-Thr as respective selective ligands, while the totality of opioid receptors was measured by using [3H]etorphine as a non-selective agonist. Receptor densities were highest in cerebral cortex, amygdala and striatum, and lowest in the substantia nigra (pars compacta). In the different brain areas of patients with
Parkinson's disease
, the density and the proportion of the various opioid receptors were not significantly different from control subjects.
...
PMID:Regional distribution of mu, delta and kappa opioid receptors in human brains from controls and parkinsonian subjects. 304 Jan 66
The stability constants of the mixed ligand complexes of L-dopa, L-tyrosine, L-
phenylalanine
, and dopamine with copper(II) and nickel(II) ions and with 2,2'-bipyridyl and 1,10-phenanthroline were determined pH-metrically at 25 degrees C and an ionic strength of 0.2 mol/dm3 (KCl). Spectral studies were made to establish the binding mode of the ambidentate L-dopa in the ternary complexes. In contrast with the aromatic (N,N) donor atoms, the (O,O) binding mode of L-dopa is particularly favored in its ternary systems with copper(II) and nickel(II); thus, even at physiological pH there is a very considerable formation of (O,O)-bound mixed ligand complexes containing a free amino acid side-chain. Numerous binary transition metal-L-dopa complexes and the ternary complexes formed with various B ligands have been evaluated from a coordination chemistry aspect, with regard to the possibility of their therapeutic application in the treatment of
Parkinson disease
.
...
PMID:Copper(II) and nickel(II) ternary complexes of L-dopa and related compounds. 407 70
Reduction of dopamine concentrations in the brains of patients with Parkinsonism, together with reported clinical improvement after the administration of dihydroxyphenylalanine, has led to the hypothesis that impaired hydroxylation of tyrosine may be associated with the disease. To test this hypothesis oral loading tests with L-
phenylalanine
and tyrosine were carried out in patients and controls. After
phenylalanine
lower blood levels of this were found in Parkinsonian patients than in controls, but tyrosine levels were the same. After tyrosine lower levels of this were also found in patients compared with controls. It is suggested that these findings indicate a decreased rate of tyrosine utilization in
Parkinson's disease
together with intestinal malabsorption; the latter is supported by the finding of abnormal D-xylose tolerance in these patients.
...
PMID:Oral phenylalanine and tyrosine tolerance tests in Parkinsonian patients. 576 91
To determine whether the oscillating clinical response to levodopa in
Parkinson's disease
(the "on-off" phenomenon) reflects fluctuations in absorption and transport of the drug, we investigated this phenomenon in nine patients with an oscillating motor state. We studied the response to continuous infusion of levodopa and the effects of meals on the plasma levodopa concentrations and on the clinical response during oral and intravenous administration of the drug. Meals reduced peak plasma levodopa concentrations by 29 per cent and delayed absorption by 34 minutes. Bypassing absorption by constant infusion of the drug produced a stable clinical state lasting for 12 hours in all of six patients and for up to 36 hours in some. High-protein meals or oral
phenylalanine
, leucine, or isoleucine (100 mg per kilogram of body weight) reversed the therapeutic effect of infused levodopa without reducing plasma levodopa concentrations. Glycine and lysine at identical doses had no effect. We conclude that interference with absorption of levodopa by food and by competition between large neutral amino acids and levodopa for transport from plasma to the brain may be partly responsible for the fluctuating clinical response in patients with
Parkinson's disease
.
...
PMID:The "on-off" phenomenon in Parkinson's disease. Relation to levodopa absorption and transport. 669 94
The specific binding of [3H]neurotensin, [3H]substance P, [3H]D-Ala2-D-Leu5-enkephalin (delta receptors) and [3H]-Tyr-D-Ala-Gly-(NMe)
Phe
-Gly-ol (mu receptors) were studied in membrane preparations of caudate nucleus, putamen, globus pallidus and substantia nigra from patients with
Parkinson's disease
and from age-matched controls. The density of neurotensin receptors was decreased in globus pallidus (lateral and medial segments) in parkinsonian brain. Substance P receptors were reduced in the putamen (anterior and posterior) and in lateral globus pallidus in
Parkinson's disease
. There was a reduction in the density of opioid receptors in posterior putamen and in mu receptors in caudate nucleus and putamen (anterior and posterior). No differences in neuropeptide receptor binding were observed in substantia nigra from parkinsonian brains compared with control subjects. The reductions in neuropeptide receptor density were less marked than the decrease in caudate and putamen content of dopamine and its metabolites. This suggests that neuropeptide receptors are only partially localized to striatal dopamine terminals.
...
PMID:Neurotensin, substance P, delta and mu opioid receptors are decreased in basal ganglia of Parkinson's disease patients. 796 97
We monitored the motor response and plasma and ventricular CSF (CSFv) concentrations of L-dopa during IV infusions of L-dopa in two patients with advanced
Parkinson's disease
. Concentrations of L-dopa in CSFv mirrored, but lagged behind, those in plasma. In the fasting state, the duration, but not the magnitude, of the motor response was greater with increasing plasma and CSFv levels of L-dopa. During IV infusions of L-dopa following oral administration of
phenylalanine
, a large neutral amino acid that shares a transport system into the brain with L-dopa, the duration of the motor response was markedly attenuated despite undiminished CSFv levels of L-dopa. These observations suggest that either L-dopa entry into CSFv and the brain are differentially affected by
phenylalanine
or that
phenylalanine
affects other steps in the motor response. These observations demonstrate that, except in the fasting state, L-dopa in CSFv is not a reliable predictor of motor response.
...
PMID:The effect of L-dopa infusions with and without phenylalanine challenges in parkinsonian patients: plasma and ventricular CSF L-dopa levels and clinical responses. 841 16
The artificial sweetener aspartame (NutraSweet) is hydrolyzed in the gut as
phenylalanine
(PA), a large neutral amino acid (LNAA). LNAAs compete with levodopa for uptake into the brain. To determine the effect of aspartame on levodopa-treated
Parkinson's disease
(PD) patients, we studied 18 PD patients with protein-sensitive motor fluctuations by administering in a double-blind and single-crossover design, on alternate days, aspartame (600 or 1,200 mg) and placebo. Every hour, we performed a motor examination and drew blood to estimate plasma LNAA, PA, and levodopa levels. Six-hundred mg of aspartame had no effect on plasma PA or motor status. Although 1,200 mg of aspartame significantly increased plasma PA, motor performance did not deteriorate. Aspartame consumption in amounts well in excess of what would be consumed by heavy users of aspartame-sweetened products has no adverse effect on PD patients.
...
PMID:Aspartame use in Parkinson's disease. 845 Oct 9
Gene transfer of tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) in animal models of
Parkinson's disease
(PD), using either genetically modified cells or recombinant virus vectors, has produced partial restoration of behavioral and biochemical deficits. The limited success of this approach may be related to the availability of the cofactor, tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4), because neither the dopamine-depleted striatum nor the cells used for gene transfer possess a sufficient amount of BH4 to support TH activity. To determine the role of BH4 in gene therapy, fibroblast cells transduced with the gene for TH were additionally modified with the gene for GTP cyclohydrolase l; an enzyme critical for BH4 synthesis. In contrast to cells transduced with only TH, doubly transduced fibroblasts spontaneously produced both BH4 and 3, 4-dihydroxy-L-
phenylalanine
. To examine further the importance of GTP cyclohydrolase I in gene therapy for PD, in vivo micro-dialysis was used to assess the biochemical changes in the dopamine-denervated striatum containing grafts of genetically modified fibroblasts. Only denervated striata grafted with fibro-blasts possessing both TH and GTP cyclohydrolase I genes displayed biochemical restoration. However, no significant differences from controls were observed in apomorphine-induced rotation. This is partly attributable to a limited duration of gene expression in vivo. These differences between fibroblasts transduced with TH alone and those additionally modified with the GTP cyclohydrolase I gene indicate that BH4 is critical for biochemical restoration in a rat model of PD and that GTP cyclohydrolase I is sufficient for production of BH4.
...
PMID:Double transduction with GTP cyclohydrolase I and tyrosine hydroxylase is necessary for spontaneous synthesis of L-DOPA by primary fibroblasts. 869 55
We measured the CSF levels of 21, and the plasma levels of 26, amino acids in 31 patients with
Parkinson's disease
(PD) and in 45 matched controls. We used an ion-exchange chromatography method. When compared to controls, PD patients had lower CSF levels of taurine, alanine, valine, leucine, isoleucine, ethanolamine, citrulline, ornithine, lysine, histidine, arginine, and alpha-aminobutyric acid. PD patients not treated with levodopa or with dopamine agonists had higher CSF tyrosine and
phenylalanine
levels than those not treated with these drugs and also than controls. PD patients had higher plasma levels of phosphoserine, threonine, methionine, tyrosine, sarcosine and alpha-aminoadipic acid, and lower plasma levels of valine, leucine, and tryptophan, than controls. The CSF/plasma ratio of many of these amino acids was significantly lower in PD patients than those of controls, suggesting that PD patients might have a dysfunction in the transport of neutral and basic amino acids across the blood-brain barrier.
...
PMID:Decreased cerebrospinal fluid levels of neutral and basic amino acids in patients with Parkinson's disease. 926 38
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