We previously found that L-tyrosine (L-TYR) but not D-TYR administered by
reverse dialysis elevated catecholamine synthesis in vivo in
medial prefrontal cortex (MPFC) and striatum of the rat (Brodnik et al., 2012). We now report L-TYR effects on
extracellular levels of catecholamines and their metabolites. In MPFC, reverse
dialysis of L-TYR elevated in vivo levels of
dihydroxyphenylacetic acid (DOPAC) (L-TYR 250 – 1000 μM),
homovanillic acid (HVA) (L-TYR 1000 μM) and
3-methoxy-4-hydroxyphenylglycol (MHPG) (L-TYR 500 – 1000 μM). In
striatum L-TYR 250 μM elevated DOPAC. We also examined L-TYR effects on
extracellular dopamine (DA) and norepinephrine (NE) levels during two 30 min
pulses (P2 and P1) of K+ (37.5 mM) separated by t = 2.0 h. L-TYR
significantly elevated the ratio P2/P1 for DA (L-TYR 125 μM) and NE
(L-TYR 125 – 250 μM) in MPFC but lowered P2/P1 for DA (L-TYR 250
μM) in striatum. Finally, we measured DA levels in brain slices using
ex-vivo voltammetry. Perfusion with L-TYR (12.5 – 50 μM)
dose-dependently elevated stimulated DA levels in striatum. In all the above
studies, D-TYR had no effect. We conclude that acute increases within the
physiological range of L-TYR levels can increase catecholamine metabolism and
efflux in MPFC and striatum. Chronically, such repeated increases in L-TYR
availability could induce adaptive changes in catecholamine transmission while
amplifying the metabolic cost of catecholamine synthesis and degradation. This
has implications for neuropsychiatric conditions in which neurotoxicity and / or
disordered L-TYR transport have been implicated.
Lithium exerts anti-dopaminergic behavioral effects. We examined whether some of these might be mediated by changes in brain levels of tyrosine (TYR), the precursor to dopamine. Lithium chloride (LiCl2) 3.0 mEq/kg IP acutely lowered serum TYR and the ratio of serum TYR to other large neutral amino acids (LNAAs); it also selectively lowered striatum TYR levels as measured in tissue or in vivo. While LiCl2 3.0 mEq/kg IP also augmented haloperidol (0.19 mg/kg SC)-induced catalepsy, this lithium effect was not attenuated by administration of TYR 100 mg/kg IP. We conclude that lithium acutely and selectively lowers brain TYR by lowering serum levels of tyrosine relative to the LNAAs that compete with it for transport across the blood–brain barrier. However, the lowering of TYR does not appear to significantly contribute to the ability of lithium to potentiate haloperidol-mediated catalepsy.
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