cysteinyldopa and aminochrome-1

cysteinyldopa has been researched along with aminochrome-1* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for cysteinyldopa and aminochrome-1

ArticleYear
Dopamine-derived dopaminochrome promotes H(2)O(2) release at mitochondrial complex I: stimulation by rotenone, control by Ca(2+), and relevance to Parkinson disease.
    The Journal of biological chemistry, 2005, Apr-22, Volume: 280, Issue:16

    Inhibitors of Complex I of the mitochondrial respiratory chain, such as rotenone, promote Parkinson disease-like symptoms and signs of oxidative stress. Dopamine (DA) oxidation products may be implicated in such a process. We show here that the o-quinone dopaminochrome (DACHR), a relatively stable DA oxidation product, promotes concentration (0.1-0.2 mum)- and respiration-dependent generation of H(2)O(2) at Complex I in brain mitochondria, with further stimulation by low concentrations of rotenone (5-30 nm). The rotenone effect required that contaminating Ca(2+) (8-10 mum) was not removed. DACHR apparently extracts an electron from the constitutively autoxidizable site in Complex I, producing a semiquinone, which then transfers an electron to O(2), generating O(2)(.) and then H(2)O(2). Mitochondrial removal of H(2)O(2) monoamine, formed by either oxidase activity or DACHR, was performed largely by glutathione peroxidase and glutathione reductase, which were negatively regulated by low intramitochondrial Ca(2+) levels. Thus, the H(2)O(2) formed accumulated in the medium if contaminating Ca(2+) was present; in the absence of Ca(2+), H(2)O(2) was completely removed if it originated from monoamine oxidase, but was less completely removed if it originated from DACHR. We propose that the primary action of rotenone is to promote extracellular O(2)(.) release via activation of NADPH oxidase in the microglia. In turn, O(2)(.) oxidizes DA to DACHR extracellularly. (The reaction is favored by the lack of GSH, which would otherwise preferably produce GSH adducts of dopaminoquinone.) Once formed, DACHR (which is resistant to GSH) enters neurons to activate the rotenone-stimulated redox cycle described.

    Topics: Animals; Brain; Cysteinyldopa; Electron Transport Complex I; Hydrogen Peroxide; Indolequinones; Mitochondria; Parkinson Disease; Rats

2005
Glutathione transferase M2-2 catalyzes conjugation of dopamine and dopa o-quinones.
    Biochemical and biophysical research communications, 2000, Jul-21, Volume: 274, Issue:1

    Human glutathione transferase M2-2 prevents the formation of neurotoxic aminochrome and dopachrome by catalyzing the conjugation of dopamine and dopa o-quinone with glutathione. NMR analysis of dopamine and dopa o-quinone-glutathione conjugates revealed that the addition of glutathione was at C-5 to form 5-S-glutathionyl-dopamine and 5-S-glutathionyl-dopa, respectively. Both conjugates were found to be resistant to oxidation by biological oxidizing agents such as O(2), H(2)O(2), and O(*-)(2), and the glutathione transferase-catalyzed reaction can therefore serve a neuroprotective antioxidant function.

    Topics: Benzoquinones; Cysteinyldopa; Dihydroxyphenylalanine; Dopamine; Glutathione; Glutathione Transferase; Humans; Indolequinones; Indoles; Isoenzymes; Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy; Models, Chemical; Oxidation-Reduction; Protein Binding; Quinones; Time Factors

2000