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THE EFFECTS OF METOPIRONE AND ADRENALECTOMY ON THE REGULATION OF THE ENZYMES MONOAMINE OXIDASE AND CATECHOL-O-METHYL TRANSFERASE IN DIFFERENT BRAIN REGIONS
Authors:H Parvez  S Parvez
Institution:Universitéde Paris XI;Centre d'Orsay, Laboratoire d'Endocrinologie, Bât 491, 91405 Orsay, France
Abstract:Abstract— The role of glucocorticoids in the regulation of the enzymes monoamine oxidase (MAO) and catechol- O -methyltransferase (COMT) in brain regions has been studied. Glucocorticoids were blocked by Metopirone. The activities of MAO and COMT were determined in the hypophysis, hypothalamus, pineal gland and in the rest of brain. All the cerebral tissues except the pineal gland demonstrated highest MAO activity 8 h after Metopirone administration, when glucocorticoids were at the lowest level. Prolonged treatment for 10 days significantly augmented MAO activity in brain, hypophysis and hypothalamus, and COMT in the hypophysis increased by 56 per cent. The COMT activity in the rest of the brain did not change significantly with either short or prolonged administration. Complete ablation of the adrenal cortex resulted in a 167 per cent rise in MAO activity of the hypophysis. Metopirone and hydrocortisone inhibit MAO and COMT in vitro. The results suggest that glucocorticoids in the circulation of normal animals inhibit the activities of MAO and COMT. The inhibition or ablation of these hormones removes this rate-limiting control of catecholamine degradation resulting in higher activities of MAO and COMT. Metopirone, an inhibitor of MAO and COMT in vitro , acts in the opposite direction in vivo due to its inhibitory effects on corticoid biosynthesis.
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