Artículo de revista
Possible role of salsolinol quinone methide in the decrease of RCSN-3 cell survival
Fecha
2001-05-25Registro en:
BIOCHEMICAL AND BIOPHYSICAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATIONS 283 (5): 1069-1076
0006-291X
Autor
Martínez Alvarado, P.
Dagnino Subiabre, Alexies
Paris Pizarro, Irmgard
Metodiewa, D.
Welch, C. J.
Olea Azar, Claudio
Caviedes Fernández, Pablo
Caviedes Codelia, Raúl
Segura Aguilar, Juan
Institución
Resumen
The endogenous dopamine-derived neurotoxin salsolinol was found to decrease survival in the dopaminergic neuronal cell line RCSN-3, derived from adult rat substantia nigra in a concentration-dependent manner (208 muM salsolinol induced a 50% survival decrease). Incubation of RCSN-3 cells with 100 muM dicoumarol and salsolinol significantly decreased cell survival by 2.5-fold (P < 0.001), contrasting with a negligible effect on RCHT cells, which exhibited nearly a 5-fold lower nomifensine-insensitive dopamine uptake. The levels of catalase and glutathione peroxidase mRNA were decreased when RCSN-3 cells were treated with 100 <mu>M salsolinol alone or in the presence of 100 muM dicoumarol, In vitro oxidation of salsolinol to o-quinone catalyzed by lactoperoxidase gave the quinone methide and 1,2-dihydro-1-methyl-6,7-isoquinoline diol as final products of salsolinol oxidation as determined by NMR analysis. Evidence of the formation of salsolinol o-semiquinone radical has been provided by ESR studies during one-electron oxidation of salsolinol catalyzed by lactoperoxidase.