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Vol. 57, Issue 3, 589-594, March 2000
Department of Neurology, University of Ulm Medical School, Ulm,
Germany (A.S., H.B., M.B., S.J., J.S.); and Departments of Neurological
Sciences and Pharmacology, Neuropharmacological Research Laboratories,
Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke's Medical Center, Chicago, Illinois
(Z.D.L., P.C.)
Inhibition of catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT; EC
2.1.1.6) is a new therapeutic strategy in the treatment of Parkinson's disease. However, nothing is known about the effects of COMT inhibition on levodopa (L-dopa)-induced toxicity in dopamine (DA)
neurons. Therefore we evaluated the effects of the selective COMT
inhibitors Ro 41-0960, OR-486, and tolcapone alone and in combination
with L-dopa in primary mesencephalic cultures from rat.
Neither COMT inhibitor affected the growth of tyrosine hydroxylase
immunoreactive (THir) cells with concentrations up to 10 µM when
studied alone. However, Ro 41-0960 reduced the
L-dopa-induced THir cell loss after 24 h in a
dose-dependent manner, shifting the TD50 value from 21 µM
in the absence to 71 µM in the presence of 1 µM Ro 41-0960 (P < .01) without affecting survival of non-DA
neurons. OR-486 and the clinically used COMT inhibitor tolcapone showed similar effects. In contrast, toxicity induced by D-dopa
was not altered by COMT inhibitors. Furthermore, the primary metabolite of L-dopa formed by COMT, 3-O-methyldopa,
and the methyl group donor
S-adenosyl-L-methionine used by COMT did not
alter THir neuron survival and L-dopa-induced toxicity,
respectively, with concentrations up to 100 µM. These data
demonstrate that COMT inhibition attenuates L-dopa toxicity
toward DA neurons in vitro, but probably not by preventing
3-O-methyldopa production or cellular S-adenosyl-L-methionine depletion.