Tetrahydrobiopterin Is Released from and Causes Preferential Death of Catecholaminergic Cells by Oxidative Stress
- 1Department of Biochemistry, University of Ulsan College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea (H.J.C, Y.J.J., H.J.K, O.H.); and 2Biomedical Brain Research Center, National Institutes of Health, Seoul, Korea (O.H.)
Abstract
The underlying cause of the selective death of the nigral dopaminergic neurons in Parkinson's disease is not fully understood. Tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) is synthesized exclusively in the monoaminergic, including dopaminergic, cells and serves as an endogenous and obligatory cofactor for syntheses of dopamine and nitric oxide. Because BH4 contributes to the syntheses of these two potential oxidative stressors and also undergoes autoxidation, thereby producing reactive oxygen species, it was possible that BH4 may play a role in the selective vulnerability of dopaminergic cells. BH4 given extracellularly was cytotoxic to catecholamine cells CATH.a, SK-N-BE(2)C, and PC12, but not to noncatecholamine cells RBL-2H3, CCL-64, UMR-106-01, or TGW-nu-1. This was not caused by increased dopamine or nitric oxide, because inhibition of their syntheses did not attenuate the damage and BH4 did not raise their cellular levels. Dihydrobiopterin and biopterin were not toxic, indicating that the fully reduced form is responsible. The toxicity was caused by generation of reactive oxygen species, because catalase, superoxide dismutase, and peroxidase protected the cells from the BH4-induced demise. Furthermore, thiol agents, such as reduced glutathione, dithiothreitol, β-mercaptoethanol, andN-acetylcysteine were highly protective. The BH4 toxicity was initiated extracellularly, because elevation of intracellular BH4 by sepiapterin did not result in cell damage. BH4 was spontaneously released from the cells of its synthesis to a large extent, and the release was not further enhanced by calcium influx. This BH4-induced cytotoxicity may represent a mechanism by which selective degeneration of dopaminergic terminals and neurons occur.
Footnotes
-
Send reprint requests to: Onyou Hwang, Ph.D., Department of Biochemistry, University of Ulsan College of Medicine, 388-1 Poongnap-dong, Songpa-ku, Seoul, 138-736, Korea. E-mail:oyhwang{at}www.amc.seoul.kr
-
This work was supported by the 98 Good Health R&D Program (HMP-98-N-1-0011) of the Ministry of Health and Welfare, Korea Science and Engineering Foundation 1999-1-213-001-5 and Korea Research Foundation postdoctoral training grant (KRF-99-F002). A part of this work was previously presented as a meeting abstract (Choi and Hwang, 1998) at the Asia Pacific Neurochemistry Meeting (June 24–26, 1998, Seoul, Korea).
- Abbreviations:
- BH4
- tetrahydrobiopterin
- FBS
- fetal bovine serum
- HS
- horse serum
- l-NAME
- NG-nitro-l-arginine methyl ester
- l-NMMA
- N-monomethyl-l-arginine
- LDH
- lactate dehydrogenase
- MEM
- minimum essential medium
- GTPCH
- GTP cyclohydrolase I
-
- Received March 23, 2000.
- Accepted June 5, 2000.
- The American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics



