Blanco-Ayala T, Sathyasaikumar K V, Uys J D, Pérez-de-la-Cruz V, Pidugu L S, Schwarcz R
Maryland Psychiatric Research Center, Department of Psychiatry, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Department of Cellular and Molecular Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC, USA.
Neuroscience. 2020 Sep 15;444:160-169. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2020.07.049. Epub 2020 Aug 5.
The tryptophan metabolite kynurenic acid (KYNA) may play an important role in normal and abnormal cognitive processes, most likely by interfering with α7 nicotinic and NMDA receptor function. KYNA is formed from its immediate precursor kynurenine either by non-enzymatic oxidation or through irreversible transamination by kynurenine aminotransferases. In the mammalian brain, kynurenine aminotransferase II (KAT II) is the principal enzyme responsible for the neosynthesis of rapidly mobilizable KYNA, and therefore constitutes an attractive target for pro-cognitive interventions. N-acetylcysteine (NAC), a brain-penetrant drug with pro-cognitive efficacy in humans, has been proposed to exert its actions by increasing the levels of the anti-oxidant glutathione (GSH) in the brain. We report here that NAC, but not GSH, inhibits KAT II activity in brain tissue homogenates from rats and humans with IC values in the high micromolar to low millimolar range. With similar potency, the drug interfered with the de novo formation of KYNA in rat brain slices, and NAC was a competitive inhibitor of recombinant human KAT II (Ki: 450 μM). Furthermore, GSH failed to S-glutathionylate recombinant human KAT II treated with the dithiocarbamate drug disulfiram. Shown by microdialysis in the prefrontal cortex of rats treated with kynurenine (50 mg/kg, i.p.), peripheral administration of NAC (500 mg/kg, i.p., 120 and 60 min before the application of kynurenine) reduced KYNA neosynthesis by ∼50%. Together, these results suggest that NAC exerts its neurobiological effects at least in part by reducing cerebral KYNA formation via KAT II inhibition.
色氨酸代谢产物犬尿喹啉酸(KYNA)可能在正常和异常认知过程中发挥重要作用,很可能是通过干扰α7烟碱型和NMDA受体功能来实现的。KYNA由其直接前体犬尿氨酸通过非酶氧化或经犬尿氨酸转氨酶不可逆转氨作用形成。在哺乳动物大脑中,犬尿氨酸转氨酶II(KAT II)是负责快速可动员的KYNA新生合成的主要酶,因此是促认知干预的一个有吸引力的靶点。N-乙酰半胱氨酸(NAC)是一种可穿透大脑且对人类具有促认知功效的药物,有人提出它是通过提高大脑中抗氧化剂谷胱甘肽(GSH)的水平来发挥作用的。我们在此报告,NAC而非GSH可抑制大鼠和人类脑组织匀浆中的KAT II活性,其IC值在高微摩尔至低毫摩尔范围内。该药物以相似的效力干扰大鼠脑片中KYNA的从头合成,且NAC是重组人KAT II的竞争性抑制剂(Ki:450 μM)。此外,GSH未能使经二硫代氨基甲酸盐药物双硫仑处理的重组人KAT II发生S-谷胱甘肽化。通过对用犬尿氨酸(50 mg/kg,腹腔注射)处理的大鼠前额叶皮质进行微透析显示,外周给予NAC(500 mg/kg,腹腔注射,在给予犬尿氨酸前120和60分钟)可使KYNA新生合成减少约50%。总之,这些结果表明NAC至少部分是通过抑制KAT II来减少大脑中KYNA的形成从而发挥其神经生物学效应的。