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Adrenergic Regulation of the Reduction in Acetyl Coenzyme A: Arylamine 7V-Acetyltransferase Activity in the Rat Pineal
Authors:L. Alphs  A. Heller  W. Lovenberg
Affiliation:Section on Biochemical Pharmacology, National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20205;Department of Pharmacological and Physiological Sciences, The University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60637.
Abstract:Abstract: Pharmacologically active agents were employed to study the mechanisms that control the reduction in levels of acetyl-coA: arylamine N-acetyltransferase activity (NAT) (EC 2.3.1.5) in the rat pineal. Pretreatment of rats with phenoxybenzamine or phentolamine prevented the rapid light-mediated decrease in NAT activity, although pretreatment with yohimbine or atropine did not alter this effect of light. Administration of mecamylamine resulted in a rapid reduction in enzyme activity prior to light exposure. When clonidine was administered intraperitoneally to animals with elevated NAT levels, there was a rapid decrease in enzyme activity, mimicking the effects of light. However, intraperitoneal injections of norepinephrine, methoxamine and phenylephrine into similar groups of animals had no significant effect on enzyme acitivity. When clonidine and norepinephrine were administered intraventricularly, there was a rapid reduction in enzyme activity. On the other hand, intraventricular administration of phenylephrine did not result in reduced enzyme activity. Pretreatment of animals with phenoxybenzamine failed to block the reduction in NAT activity precipitated by low doses of clonidine. This clonidine-mediated reduction in enzyme activity was, however, blocked by yohimbine. When animals were simultaneously exposed to light and administered clonidine, the rapid reduction in NAT activity was affected only when animals were pretreated with both yohimbine and phenoxybenzamine. In contrast to the decrease in pineal NAT activity observed in in vivo preparations, incubation of pineals with clonidine in an organ culture system produced a moderate, but consistent, rise in enzyme activity. These results suggest that stimulation of a receptor with α-adrenergic characteristics mediates the reduction in NAT activity produced by light. Stimulation of yet a second adrenergic-like receptor appears to mediate a reduction in pineal NAT activity precipitated by clonidine. Our evidence suggests that one or both of these receptors are located within the central nervous system.
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