Fernstrom John D, Fernstrom Madelyn H
Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA 15213, USA.
J Nutr. 2007 Jun;137(6 Suppl 1):1539S-1547S; discussion 1548S. doi: 10.1093/jn/137.6.1539S.
Aromatic amino acids in the brain function as precursors for the monoamine neurotransmitters serotonin (substrate tryptophan) and the catecholamines [dopamine, norepinephrine, epinephrine; substrate tyrosine (Tyr)]. Unlike almost all other neurotransmitter biosynthetic pathways, the rates of synthesis of serotonin and catecholamines in the brain are sensitive to local substrate concentrations, particularly in the ranges normally found in vivo. As a consequence, physiologic factors that influence brain pools of these amino acids, notably diet, influence their rates of conversion to neurotransmitter products, with functional consequences. This review focuses on Tyr and phenylalanine (Phe). Elevating brain Tyr concentrations stimulates catecholamine production, an effect exclusive to actively firing neurons. Increasing the amount of protein ingested, acutely (single meal) or chronically (intake over several days), raises brain Tyr concentrations and stimulates catecholamine synthesis. Phe, like Tyr, is a substrate for Tyr hydroxylase, the enzyme catalyzing the rate-limiting step in catecholamine synthesis. Tyr is the preferred substrate; consequently, unless Tyr concentrations are abnormally low, variations in Phe concentration do not affect catecholamine synthesis. Unlike Tyr, Phe does not demonstrate substrate inhibition. Hence, high concentrations of Phe do not inhibit catecholamine synthesis and probably are not responsible for the low production of catecholamines in subjects with phenylketonuria. Whereas neuronal catecholamine release varies directly with Tyr-induced changes in catecholamine synthesis, and brain functions linked pharmacologically to catecholamine neurons are predictably altered, the physiologic functions that utilize the link between Tyr supply and catecholamine synthesis/release are presently unknown. An attractive candidate is the passive monitoring of protein intake to influence protein-seeking behavior.
大脑中的芳香族氨基酸作为单胺神经递质血清素(底物色氨酸)和儿茶酚胺[多巴胺、去甲肾上腺素、肾上腺素;底物酪氨酸(Tyr)]的前体。与几乎所有其他神经递质生物合成途径不同,大脑中血清素和儿茶酚胺的合成速率对局部底物浓度敏感,尤其是在体内通常发现的浓度范围内。因此,影响这些氨基酸脑池的生理因素,尤其是饮食,会影响它们转化为神经递质产物的速率,并产生功能后果。本综述重点关注酪氨酸(Tyr)和苯丙氨酸(Phe)。提高大脑酪氨酸浓度会刺激儿茶酚胺的产生,这是活跃放电神经元特有的效应。急性(单餐)或慢性(数天摄入)增加蛋白质摄入量会提高大脑酪氨酸浓度并刺激儿茶酚胺合成。与酪氨酸一样,苯丙氨酸是酪氨酸羟化酶的底物,该酶催化儿茶酚胺合成中的限速步骤。酪氨酸是首选底物;因此,除非酪氨酸浓度异常低,苯丙氨酸浓度的变化不会影响儿茶酚胺合成。与酪氨酸不同,苯丙氨酸不会表现出底物抑制。因此,高浓度的苯丙氨酸不会抑制儿茶酚胺合成,可能也不是苯丙酮尿症患者儿茶酚胺产生低的原因。虽然神经元儿茶酚胺释放与酪氨酸诱导的儿茶酚胺合成变化直接相关,并且与儿茶酚胺神经元药理学相关的脑功能可预测地发生改变,但利用酪氨酸供应与儿茶酚胺合成/释放之间联系的生理功能目前尚不清楚。一个有吸引力的候选因素是对蛋白质摄入量的被动监测,以影响寻求蛋白质的行为。