The possible mechanisms of inhibition and activation of various cations on rat pineal N-acetyltransferase (NAT) were elucidated. Copper was found to be a partial mixed noncompetitive inhibitor of NAT with respect to both substrates and this inhibition can be considered to result primarily from impairment of tryptamine (serotonin) binding to the enzyme. Both calcium and magnesium were found to activate NAT by a similar mechanism, with calcium being more effective than magnesium. It appears that the activation results from cation binding to the enzyme causing an increased affinity of tryptamine (serotonin) for binding to NAT and therefore enhancing catalytic activity. The monovalent cations, potassium and sodium, activated NAT by a similar mechanism which differed from the caused by the divalent cations. It can be suggested that tryptamine (serotonin) binds to the enzyme followed by the monovalent cation which enhances binding of the acetyl donor and thereby promotes catalysis. At high potassium or sodium concentration the affinity of acetyl coenzyme A for NAT begins to decrease suggesting that excess monovalent cations can be inhibitory and may represent an endogenous regulatory mechanism controlling in vivo NAT activity. It is possible that certain cations may be involved in regulation of melatonin synthesis although the physiological significance of such modulation remains unknown.
The various pineal gland tryptophan metabolites were administered to male rats intraperitoneally (100 micrograms/kg) and rectal temperatures were recorded. Of the compounds tested, hydroxytryptophan, N-acetylserotonin, hydroxytryptophol, and their corresponding methoxyindoles all caused a marked hypothermia, indicating that several indolic products may be involved in thermoregulation. Although the brain penetration of indoles is poor, a central site of action would be most likely, although peripheral actions cannot be excluded. The mechanism of induction of hypothermia may involve peptides, the pituitary-thyroid axis, the adrenal gland, or a combination of these. These results may suggest that the pineal gland integrates environmental cues to act in concert with physiological thermostats in the fine tuning of thermoregulation.
N-Acetyltransferase (NAT) activity at night and following isoproterenol treatment in intact animals was higher in rats pretreated with magnesium than in controls. This effect was probably due to enhancement of agonist binding and/or adenylate cyclase activation caused by magnesium ions. A similar effect was observed in vitro, where magnesium increased norepinephrine-stimulated NAT activity in organ-cultured pineal glands, suggesting that magnesium acts primarily on the pineal gland as opposed to some other peripheral or central site. This enhancement of NAT activity by magnesium would presumably lead to increased melatonin production; and as melatonin has been shown to decrease serum magnesium levels, a negative feedback mechanism may exist.
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