| Literature DB >> 29063289 |
Magdalena Kurnik-Łucka1, Pertti Panula2, Andrzej Bugajski3, Krzysztof Gil3.
Abstract
Entities:
Keywords: Acetaldehyde; DMDHIQ+; Dopamine; Parkinson’s disease; Salsolinol; Tetrahydroisoquinolines
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29063289 PMCID: PMC5766726 DOI: 10.1007/s12640-017-9818-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurotox Res ISSN: 1029-8428 Impact factor: 3.911
Fig. 1Metabolic pathways of dopamine and (R)-salsolinol in the brain (based on Naoi et al. 2002)
Some examples of (R)- and (S)-salsolinol levels in fruits and vegetables obtained in the USA in August 2007, according to DeCuypere (2010). Solid-phase extraction (SPE) was performed on all samples prior to liquid chromatography–mass with tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) analysis. Values are expressed in ng/g of wet weight. SAL salsolinol
| Source | (R)SAL (ng/g wet weight) | (S)SAL (ng/g wet weight) |
|---|---|---|
| Mushroom | 3572.80 +/− 13.44 | 3557.40 +/− 17.48 |
| Banana | 2717.50 +/− 9.81 | 2870.87 +/− 10.95 |
| Leaf letuce | 2615.23 +/− 42.35 | 2660.49 +/− 33.55 |
| Celery | 1372.85 +/− 15.60 | 1382.01 +/− 12.03 |
| Grape | 951.62 +/− 11.71 | 980.84 +/− 12.96 |
| Sweet potato | 295.23 +/− 5.87 | 286.80 +/− 8.49 |
| Green bean | 195.17 +/− 9.31 | 215.58 +/− 6.89 |
| Pear | 34.09 +/− 1.44 | 35.18 +/− 9.74 |
| Peach | 31.85 +/− 9.51 | 39.46 +/− 5.54 |
| Cherry | 16.73 +/− 3.44 | 12.03 +/− 4.77 |
Comparison of the basic physicochemical properties of salsolinol and MPTP (PubChem)
Examples of in vitro studies related to salsolinol. DA dopamine, DAT dopamine transporter, EC50 the half maximal effective concentration, IC50 the half maximal inhibitory concentration, N/A not available, NE norepinephrine, PRL prolactin, SAL salsolinol, TH tyrosine hydroxylase. Salsolinol was applied as a racemic mixture unless otherwise stated
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| Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Dallas, TX, USA | 0.01 μM – 1 mM (racemic and purified R- and S-SAL) | commercially cell-based assays, composed by recombinant CHO-K1 cells that overexpress only the human μ-opioid receptor | SAL activated the μ-opioid receptor by the classical G protein-adenylate cyclase pathway with EC50 of 2 × 10−5 M. The agonist action of SAL was fully blocked by the μ-opioid antagonist naltrexone. The EC50 for the purified stereoisomers (R)-SAL and (S)-SAL were 6 × 10−4 M and 9 × 10−6 M, respectively. Molecular docking simulations predicted a morphine-like interaction of (R)-SAL and (S)-SAL stereoisomers with the μ-opioid receptor and favoured the interaction for the (S)-SAL stereoisomer. | Berríos-Cárcamo et al. ( |
| N/A | 0–1000 μM | human neuroblastoma (SH-SY5Y), human primary glioblastoma | SAL was toxic to SH-SY5Y cells in a dose-dependent manner with 47.50% cell death at 500 μM. Similarly, 500 μM SAL induced 13.50 and 50.50% death in U87 and THP-1 cells, respectively. | Wang et al. ( |
| Synthesized (Beijing Institute of Technology, Beijing, China) | 275 – 2200 μM | human neuroblastoma (SH-SY5Y) cells | The lethal dose (LD50) values for SAL = 1500 μM. | Arshad et al. ( |
| Synthesized (Semmelweis University, Budapest, Hungary) | 0–100 μM | bacterial Escherichia coli (BL21 DE-3) cells | SAL completely inhibited DA binding, to both the high and low affinity DA binding sites. The concentration at which half the DA bound was 58 ± 4.4 nM of SAL. It produced 3.7-fold greater inhibition of Ser40-phosphorylated TH compared to DA by competing more strongly with tetrahydrobiopterin. | Briggs et al. ( |
| Sigma Aldrich, St. Louis, MO, USA | 100-800 μM | human neuroblastoma (SH-SY5Y) cells | SAL caused a dose-dependent toxicity mediated by apoptosis (increase in caspase-3 levels). | Brown et al. ( |
| 25, 50, 100, 200, 400 and 800 μM | Maximum toxicity (about 50%) was achieved with 400 μM of SAL. | Qualls et al. ( | ||
| 1–100 μM, especially 10 μM | neural stem cells (NSCs) | Morphological impairment, cleaved caspase-3 and decreased Bcl-2:Bax suggested apoptosis. SAL toxicity coincided with reduced pAkt level and its downstream effectors: pCREB, pGSK-3b, Bcl-2, suggesting repressed PI3K/Akt signaling pathway, confirmed on adding the PI3K inhibitor (LY294002), which abolished the protection | Shukla et al. ( | |
| N/A | 0 – 400 μM | rat pheochromocytoma (PC12) and parkin knockdown (PC 20) cells | The elevated | Su et al. ( |
| Sigma Aldrich, St. Louis, MO, USA | 0–500 μM | human neuroblastoma (SH-SY5Y) cells | SAL neurotoxicity towards SH-SY5Y cells was potentiated during treatment with concentrations of glutathione below 250 μM, whereas glutathione concentrations above 250 μM resulted in protection against SAL-induced neuronal cell death. | Wszelaki and Melzig ( |
| 10–500 μM | human neuroblastoma (SH-SY5Y, SK-NSH) cells | The cell viability decreased in a concentration-dependent manner. 500 μM of SAL caused 49.08 ± 1.8% and 22.5 ± 4.5% cell death in undifferentiated and differentiated SH-SY5Y cells, respectively. | Wszelaki and Melzig ( | |
| 250 μM | human neuroblastoma (SH-SY5Y) cells | The anti-apoptotic action of N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) on SAL (250 μM)-evoked cell death in human SH-SY5Y cells was observed, without the influence on caspase-3 activity. | Jantas and Lason ( | |
| Synthesized (Szent-Györgyi Albert University, Szeged, Hungary) | 0,001 - 10 μM (hydrobromide) | bovine anterior pituitary cells | SAL significantly stimulated the release of PRL from cultured bovine anterior pituitary cells at doses of 1 - 10 μM, compared to control cells. | Hashizume et al. ( |
| SAL (1 μM), thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH, 0,01 μM) ), and SAL plus TRH significantly increased the release of PRL, but the additive effect of SAL and TRH detected | Hashizume et al. ( | |||
| 1–1 mM | human embryonic kidney (HEK-293), human neuroblastoma (SH-SY5Y) and human glioblastoma (HTZ-146 cells | SAL was the endogenous key substrate of the sodium-independent organic cation transporter (OCT2). OCT2 was preferentially expressed in the dopaminergic regions of the substantia nigra where it co-localized with DAT and TH. SAL exhibited a selective toxicity toward OCT2-expressing cells that was prevented by cyclo(his-pro). | Taubert et al. ( | |
| Sigma Aldrich, St. Louis, MO, USA | 50–500 μM | human neuroblastoma (SH-SY5Y) cells | SAL treatment caused up-regulation in the levels of c-Jun and phosphorylated c-Jun. The binding activity of NF-κB to DNA was enhanced by SAL in the concentration dependent manner. SAL decreased the levels of the anti-apoptotic protein Bcl-2 and increased pro-apoptotic protein Bax, while enhancing the release of cytochrome-c from mitochondria. | Wanpen et al. ( |
| 0 – 0.8 mM | Exposure to 0.4 mM of SAL resulted in approximately 65% reduction in cell viability. Maximal toxic effect was observed with 0.8 mM of SAL where approximately 80% of cells did not survive. | Copeland et al. ( | ||
| 0–500 μM | human neuroblastoma (SH-SY5Y) andmice fetal mesencephalic cell | SAL increased the production of reactive oxygen species and significantly decreased glutathione levels and cell viability in SH-SY5Y cells. SAL decreased intracellular ATP levels and induced nuclear condensation in these cells. SAL-induced depletion in cell viability was completely prevented by N-acetylcysteine. | Wanpen et al. ( | |
| 100 μM | human neuroblastoma (SH-SY5Y) cell | Both exogenous IGF-1 and IGF-1 gene transfer significantly prevented the SAL-induced cell death and increased cell viability. | Shavali et al. ( | |
| 10–200 μM | human melanoma (FRM, MNT and M14) and murine melanoma (B16) cells | SAL enhanced TH activity and melanin production. | De Marco et al. ( | |
| 0.01–1000 μM | human embryonic kidney (HEK-293) and mouse neuroblastoma (Neuro-2A) cells | Only 2(N)-methylated isoquinoline derivatives structurally related to MPTP/MPP+ are selectively toxic to dopaminergic cells via uptake by the DAT. | Storch et al. ( | |
| 1 mM | dopaminergic neuronal (SN4741) cells | SAL induced the moderate ROS activity compared to paraquat, and subsequently activated much lower level of JNK1/2 activity compared to MPP+ and paraquat treatments. | Chun et al. ( | |
| 0–500 μM | rat pheochromocytoma (PC12) cells, pBR322 and X174 supercoiled DNA, calf thymus DNA | SAL in combination with Cu(II) induced strand scission in pBR322 and X174 supercoiled DNA, which was inhibited by the copper chelator, reactive oxygen species (ROS) scavengers, reduced glutathione and catalase. Reaction of calf thymus DNA with SAL plus Cu(II) resulted in substantial oxidative DNA damage as determined by 8-hydroxydeoxyguanosine (8-OH-dG) formation. Blockade of the dihydroxyl functional group of SAL abolished its capability to yield 8-OH-dG in the presence of Cu(II). | Jung et al. ( | |
| rat pheochromocytoma (PC12) cells | SAL causes reduced viability, which was exacerbated by Cu2+. Although SAL alone could cause apoptotic death in PC12 cells, cells treated with SAL together with Cu2+ became necrotic. | Kim et al. ( | ||
| 0-200 μM | dopaminergic neuronal (RCSN-3) cells | SAL was found to decrease survival in RCSN-3 cells (derived from adult rat substantia nigra) in a concentration-dependent manner (208 μM of SAL induced a 50% survival decrease). | Martinez-Alvarado et al. ( | |
| Synthesized (according to Haber et al. | 1 mM (R- and S-SAL) | mouse anterior pituitary tumor (AtT-20) cells (clone D16v) | SAL bound to the D(2) receptor family, especially to the D(3) receptor with a K(i) of 0.48+/-0.021 μM. S-SAL significantly inhibited the formation of cyclic AMP and the release of beta-endorphin and ACTH in a pituitary cell system. | Melzig et al. ( |
| Sigma Aldrich, St. Louis, MO, USA | 0–1000 μM | human neuroblastoma (SH-SY5Y) cells | SAL was cytotoxic to human SH-SY5Y cells via impairment of cellular energy production. The IC50 = 34.2 μM (after 72 h) was established for SAL. | Storch et al. ( |
| Synthesized (according to Teitel et al. | 0.1 μM–10 mM (R- and SSAL) | The IC50 values were 540.2 μM for (R)-SAL and 296.6 μM for (S)-SAL. | Takahashi et al. ( | |
| Synthetized (according to Haber et al. | 0-500 μM (R- and S-SAL) | mouse anterior pituitary tumor (ArT-20) cells | A significant decrease in the proopiomelanocortin (POMC) gene expression by the S-SAL was noted. The basal secretion of adrenocorticotropin (ACTH) as well as the corticotropin-releasing factor-stimulated ACTH release remained unchanged after R- and S-SAL treatment. It was shown that a reduction of intracellular cAMP level occurred after the treatment of the cells with S-SAL whereas R-SAL did not affect the cAMP production. | Putscher et al. ( |
| Sigma Aldrich, St. Louis, MO, USA | 0.001–1 mM | human neuroblastoma (SH-SY5Y) cells | SAL stimulated catecholamine uptake with EC50 values of 17 μM and 11 μM, for NA and DA, respectively. At concentrations above 100 μM, SAL inhibited the uptake of NA and DA, with IC50 values of 411 μM and 379 μM, respectively. | Willets et al. ( |
| N/A | 0.001–10 mM | calf aortic endothelial (BKEz-7) cells | SAL damaged the cultivated calf aortic endothelial cells (cytotoxic effects estimated by cell counting after 72 h treatment with SAL, IC50 = 38 μM), especially the mitochondria, and inhibited the respiration measured as inhibition of the oxygen consumption. The damage of endothelial cells was confirmed by the electron microscopy with various disintegrations of mitochondria. | Melzig and Zipper ( |
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| Sigma Aldrich, St. Louis, MO, USA | 0.1–2 mM | human ceruloplasmin (hCP) | Incubation of hCP with SAL increased the protein aggregation and enzyme inactivation in a dosedependent manner. Reactive oxygen species scavengers and copper chelators inhibited the SALmediated hCP modification and inactivation. The formation of dityrosine was detected in SALmediated hCP aggregates. Amino acid analysis post the exposure of hCP to SAL revealed that aspartate, histidine, lysine, threonine and tyrosine residues were particularly sensitive. | Kim et al. ( |
| 0.01–1 μM | 230 μm horizontal slices of CD-1 mice midbrain | SAL was able to excite pVTA DA cells mice treated with α-methyl-p-tyrosine (a DA biosynthesis inhibitor). SAL was needed for ethanol-induced pVTA DA cells activation since neither acetaldehyde nor ethanol was able to excite these neurons in the absence of DA. | Melis et al. ( | |
| 0.05–1 mM | horse cytochrome c | Protein aggregation increased in a dose-dependent manner after incubation of cytochrome c with SAL. The formation of carbonyl compounds and the release of iron were obtained in salsolinoltreated cytochrome c. Reactive oxygen species scavengers and iron specific chelator inhibited the SAL-mediated cytochrome c modification and carbonyl compound formation. | Kang ( | |
| 0.5 mM | neurofilament-L (NF-L) | NF-L exposure to SAL produced losses of glutamate, lysine and proline residues. Carnosine and anserine were shown to significantly prevent SAL-mediated NF-L aggregation. | Kang ( | |
| 0-1000 μM alone or in presence of Cu or Fe | plasmid DNA pBR322 or calf thymus DNA | SAL in the presence of divalent copper induced strand scission and damage in both plasmid and genomic DNA. | Tharakan et al. ( | |
| 0.01–1 μM | 250–300 μm coronal slices of rat midbrain | SAL excited VTA-dopamine neurons indirectly by activating μ-opioid receptors, which inhibited GABA neurons in the VTA. | Xie et al. ( | |
| 200–250 μm coronal slices of rat midbrain | SAL via the activation of presynaptic D1receptors and facilitation of glutaminergic transmission contributed to SAL-induced excitation of pVTA DA neurons. | Xie and Ye ( | ||
| 5 mM | equine spleen ferritin | The exposure of ferritin to SAL resulted in the generation of protein carbonyl compounds and the formation of dityrosine. | Kang ( | |
| 0-0.2 mM | pUC19 plasmid DNA purified from Escherchia coli | SAL/ferritin system-mediated DNA cleavage and mutation was attributed to hydroxyl radical generation via the Fenton-like reaction of free iron ions released from oxidatively damaged ferritin. | Kang ( | |
| 0–5 mM | human Cu,Zn-superoxide dismutase | SAL led to inactivation of Cu,Zn-superoxide dismuthase (SOD) in a concentration-dependent manner. Free radical scavengers and catalase inhibited the SAL-mediated Cu,Zn-SOD modification. Exposure of Cu,Zn-SOD to SAL led also to the generation of protein carbonyl compounds. | Kang ( | |
| 10, 20, 50 nM | an Fe3+–EDTA–H2O2 complex and a NO–H2O2 system | The | Nappi et al. ( | |
| Synthetized (according to Teitel et al. | 0.05–1 mM (R- and S-SAL; hydrobromide) | pig brain soluble and membrane-bound catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT) | Kinetic analysis of the O-methylation by S-COMT yielded almost equivalent Km values of 0.138 mM [(R)-SAL] and 0.156 mM [(S)-SAL]. Both enantiomers had similar Vmax values (0.201 and 0.189 nmol min-1 mg protein-1, respectively). | Hötzl and Thomas ( |
| Sigma Aldrich, St. Louis, MO, USA | 0–500 μM | øX174 RFI supercoiled DNA, calf thymus DNA, PC12 cells | Incubation of SAL and CuCl2 with calf thymus DNA caused strand breaks. SAL in combination with Cu(II) mediated the strand scission in øX174 RFI supercoiled DNA in a time-related manner. SAL induced cell death in cultured PC12 cells, which was exacerbated by Cu(II). | Kim et al. ( |
| Synthesized (King’s College of London, London, UK) | 100 μM | male Wistar rat striata synaptosomes | SAL (100 μM) produced the 39.9% inhibition of the [3H]dopamine uptake. | McNaught et al. ( |
| 0.5–10 mM | intact Wistar rat liver mitochondria | Isoquinoline derivatives may exert mitochondrial toxicity | McNaught et al. ( | |
| N/A | 0–0.5 mM | microsomal fractions of male Wistar rats livers | Histamine and SAL competitively inhibited the activity of debrisoquine 4-monooxygenase (Ki = 0.31 and 0.43 mM, respectively). | Iwahashi et al. ( |
| Synthetized from salsolidine | human placental MAO A and human liver MAO B | Stereoselective competitive inhibition of MAO (monoamine oxidase) type A was found with the (R)-SAL (Ki = 31 μM), but not MAO type B. | Bembenek et al. ( | |
| Synthetized | 10-30 μM | liver homogenate (human liver dihydropteridine reductase) | SAL inhibited human liver dihydropteridine reductase non-competitively. | Shen et al. ( |
| Synthesized (according to Craig et al. | 10–200 μg/ml, 333 μg/ml (hydrobromide) | chick biventer cervicis nerve muscle preparation, guinea pig ileum, chick biventer cervicis homogenates | SAL produced agonist effects at muscarinic receptors. In the chick biventer cervicis preparation, SAL (10-200 pg/mL) produced initial twitch augmentation, followed by blockade accompanied by a slowly developing contracture. Responses to exogenous carbachol were unaffected while those to acetylcholine were augmented. The neuromuscular blockade was unable to be reversed by choline, caffeine, physostigmine or tetanus. | Rodger et al. ( |
Examples of in vivo studies related to salsolinol. DA dopamine, i.c.v. intracerebroventricular, i.p. intraperitoneal, i.v. intravenous, N/A not available, NAc nucleus accumbens, NE norepinephrine, PRL prolactin, SAL salsolinol, TRH thyrotropin-releasing hormone, VTA ventral tegmental area (a anterior and p posterior part). Salsolinol was applied as a racemic mixture unless otherwise stated
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| 200 mg/kg b.w. (Sigma-Aldrich, USA) in 0.9% NaCl | i.p. osmotic ALZET minipumps for 2 or 4 weeks | male Wistar rats, 230–265 g | The epididymal fat pad weight over final body mass ratio was lower in SAL-treated rats on high fat diet in comparison with the controls. The area, perimeter, short and long axis of the fad pad adipocytes were significantly decreased in SAL-treated rat. | Aleksandrovych et al. ( |
| The myenteric neuron count, the mean size of the neuron body, the area of ganglia and the diameter of nerve strands were decreased in both of the SAL-treated groups compared with the controls. Exogenous SAL treatment led to enteric neuronal cell death probably via initiation of apoptosis. | Kurnik et al. ( | |||
| 100 mg/kg b.w.(Sigma-Aldrich, USA) in 0.9% NaCl | i.p. injection once or for 14 consecutive days | male Wistar rats, 220–240 g | SAL under physiological conditions could not be an endogenous factor involved in the neurodegenerative processes, it can rather exert a protective action on nerve cells in the brain. | Możdżeń et al. ( |
| 30 pmol (Santa Cruz Biotechnology, USA) in aCSF – purified R and S-SAL | slow injection into the left pVTA | female Wistar-derived naïve UChB rats, 200–250 g | Repeated administration of (R)-SAL caused: (1) conditioned place preference; (2) locomotor sensitization; and (3) marked increase in binge-like ethanol intake; while (S)-SAL did not influence any of these parameters. | Quintanilla et al. ( |
| 100 mg/kg b.w.(Sigma-Aldrich, USA) in 0.9% NaCl | i.p. injection once or for 14 consecutive days | male Wistar rats, 220–240 g | Chronic administration of SAL significantly impaired the response of dopaminergic neurons to L-DOPA administration. | Wąsik et al. ( |
| 30 pmol/0.2 μL in aCSF for VTA injection or 10 mg/kg in 0.9% NaCl for systemic administration (Santa Cruz Biotechnology or Sigma-Aldrich, USA); free of isosalsolinol | single or repeated injection into the left pVTA or i.p. | female Wistar-derived naïve UChB rats, 200–250 g | SAL produced conditioned place preference and increased locomotor activity, whether intracerebrally or intraperitoneally. Results might indicate that systemically administered SAL is able to cross the blood-brain barrier. | Quintanilla et al. ( |
| 0.03, 0.3, 1 or 3 μM (Sigma-Aldrich, USA) in aCSF | single injection into the pVTA | male Wistar rats, 350–400 g | Local application of intermediate concentrations of SAL stimulated DA neurons in the pVTA, whereas higher concentrations may be having secondary effects within the pVTA that inhibit DA neuronal activity. | Deehan et al. ( |
| 200 mg/kg b.w. (Sigma-Aldrich, USA) in 0.9% NaCl | i.p. osmotic ALZET minipumps for 2 or 4 weeks | male Wistar rats, 243–263 g | SAL increased serum levels of IL-1β and histamine and the total number of mast cells in the gastrointestinal wall. | Kurnik et al. ( |
| Diminished body weight gain and lower adipose tissue accumulation in SAL-treated animals were due to delayed gastric emptying together with disturbed gut function resulting in absorptive dysfunction. | Kurnik et al. ( | |||
| 50 mg/kg/day b.w. (Sigma-Aldrich, USA) in 0.9% NaCl | i.p. injections for 3 weeks | male Wistar rats, 180–220 g | SAL proved to be destructive on the mast cells in all segments of gastrointestinal tract | Gil et al. ( |
| 30 pmol/200 nL/hemisphere (Sigma-Aldrich, USA) in aCSF | single intra-VTA, bilaterally | male Wistar rats, ~300 g | SAL administered into the pVTA produced psychomotor responses and reinforcing effects, probably, through the activation of μ-opioid receptors. | Hipólito et al. ( |
| 0.3, 3, 30, 300, and 3,000 pmol (Sigma-Aldrich, USA) in aCSF | single injection or repeatedly during 12 days into the pVTA | male Wistar rats, 220–300 g | Intra-VTA SAL administration induced an increase of the spontaneous motor activity of the rats with the maximal effect at the dose of 30.0 pmol. | Hipólito et al. ( |
| 10 μg of SAL (N/A) in 0.9% NaCl or 3 g of banana (corresponding to 75 μg of SAL) homogenized in 0.9% NaCl | single gavage | male Sprague-Dawley rats; adult male alcohol-preferring (P) and alcohol-nonpreferring (NP) rats, N/A | A single administration of SAL resulted in a significant elevation of rat plasma SAL levels, which declined to near basal levels by 14 hours. The mean plasma levels of (S)- and (R)-SAL at 1 hour after administration were 650 ± 46 and 614 ± 42 pg/ml, respectively. The mean basal (S)- and (R)-SAL levels were 11 ± 4 and 10 ± 1 pg/ml, respectively. A single intake banana also increased the plasma SAL level. Despite the increases observed in plasma SAL or DA levels, their levels were not changed in the striatum or NA. The basal SAL levels were markedly lower in the NA of P than NP rats. The SAL levels in the NA of P rats were not changed after 8 weeks of free-choice alcohol drinking and chronic ethanol drinking did not result in changes of SAL enantiomeric distribution, either. | Lee et al. ( |
| 0.1, 5 and 25 μmol (Sigma-Aldrich, USA) in aCSF | single 20-min infusion into shell or core subregions of NAc | male Wistar rats, 300–320 g | Application of 5 and 25 μmol SAL into the core increased the dialysate levels of DA. The administration of the same doses of this drug into the shell significantly reduced the DA levels in this subregion. | Hipólito et al. ( |
| 0.03, 0.1, 0.3, 1.0 or 3.0 μM (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) in aCSF with ascorbate | self-infusions into the pVTA or aVTA | male Wistar rats, 250–320 g | SAL produced reinforcing effects in the pVTA of Wistar rats, and these effects were mediated by activation of DA neurons and local 5-HT3 receptors. | Rodd et al. ( |
| 10, 20, 40 or 80 nmol (Sigma-Aldrich, USA) in 0.9% NaCl – R-SAL | single injection into striatum | male Sprague-Dawley rats, 250–350 g | (R)-SAL led to a concentration-dependent decrease in the activity of acetylocholinesterase. Acetylocholine concentrations in striatum treated with (R)-salsolinol or N-methyl-(R)-SAL were increased to 131.7% and 239.8% in comparison with control, respectively. (R)-SAL reduced the concentrations of DA metabolites in the striatum. | Zhu et al. ( |
| 0.2 to 25 mg/kg b.w. (synthesised at Institute of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, University of Szeged, Hungary) in 0.9% NaCl | single i.p. injection | male and female Sprague–Dawley rats, 250–350 g; male NE transporter knock out (NET KO) mice, 3-5 months old | SAL did not affect the | Székács et al. ( |
| 25 mg/kg b.w. (synthesised at Institute of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, University of Szeged, Hungary) in 0.9% NaCl | male Sprague–Dawley rats after medullectomy, adrenalectomy and hypophysectomy, 200–300 g | The presence of the adrenal gland was not required for the changes of PRL secretion, nor for the reduction of peripheral sympathetic activity induced by SAL. The effect of SAL on peripheral sympathetic terminals was not affected by hypophysectomy, consequently the role of pituitary hormones in the effect of SAL on the peripheral catecholamine metabolism might be excluded. | Székács et al. ( | |
| 1.8 mg/kg b.w. (Sigma–Aldrich, USA) | single i.p. injection | Male Sprague–Dawley rats, 280–320 g | 1,2,3,4-tetrahydroisoquinoline (TIQ), 5,6,7,8-tetrahydroisoquinoline (5-TIQ), 1-benzyl-1,2,3,4-tetrahydroisoquinoline (1-BnTIQ), and SAL were studied. TIQ and 5-TIQ passed through the blood–brain barrier more easily than 1-BnTIQ, while SAL was unable to cross the barrier. | Song et al. ( |
| 50 mg/kg/day b.w. (Sigma-Aldrich, USA) in 0.9% NaCl | i.p. injections for 3 weeks | male Wistar rats, ~200 g | SAL had a direct effect on both interstitial cells of Cajal and neuronal pathways of gastro-duodenal reflexes. | Banach et al. ( |
| Fasting intestinal myoelectrical activity (IMA) recordings did not reveal differences in frequency of migrating myoelectrical complexes and dominant frequency (DF) of slow waves between SAL and saline group. However in response to gastrointestinal stimulation in the SAL group DF of IMA remained unchanged whereas in the controls increased. | Banach et al. ( | |||
| 10 mg/kg b.w. (synthesised at Institute of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, University of Szeged, Hungary) in 0.9% NaCl | single i.v. injection | primiparous lactating Sprague-Dawley-derived rats, N/A | The observed changes in the level of cAMP following the acute treatment of SAL in the median eminence (ME) and the anterior lobe (AL) seems to be related to interacting neuroendocrine signals delivered from the ME to the AL through the long portal vessels to release PRL. | Radnai et al. ( |
| 40 mg/kg b.w. (synthesised at Institute of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, University of Szeged, Hungary) in 0.9% NaCl | male Sprague-Dawley rats, 350 g or primiparous lactating female rats, N/A | SAL had an important role in the regulation of PRL release induced by physiologic and environmental stimuli; therefore, it could be considered as a candidate for being the PRL releasing factor in the hypothalamo-hypophysial system. | Radnai et al. ( | |
| i.p. injections | male Sprague-Dawley rats, 350 g | SAL could candidate as an endogenous PRL-releasing factor and a potent inhibitor of stress-induced plasma release of epinephrine and NE. | Bodnár et al. ( | |
| 1.25 nM (Sigma-Aldrich, USA) in 0.1 M of Tris-HCl | single injection into the right substantia nigra | male Sprague-Dawley rats, 180–220 g | DT-diaphorase played a protective role in the nigrostriatal dopaminergic systems. | Díaz-Véliz et al. ( |
| 0.3, 1, 3, 12.5 μM (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) in aCSF ⁄ ascorbate | self-infusions into the shell of NAc | female alcohol-preferring (P) rats from the 49th and 50th generations, 250 to 320 g | SAL was reinforcing into the shell of NA of P rats at concentrations that were pharmacologically possible, and these reinforcing actions were mediated in part by D2/D3-like receptors. | Rodd et al. ( |
| 5 mg/kg b.w. in 0.9% NaCl (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) | single i.p. injection | naive male C57BL/6 strain mice 8–9 weeks old; randombred CD-1 mice; male Wistar rats, 220–250 g | SAL antagonized the agonistic conformation of DA receptor and that endogenous 1,2,3,4-tetrahydroisoquinolines may play a role of natural feedback regulators of the activity of dopaminergic system. | Vetulani et al. ( |
| male Wistar rats, 220–240 g | Acute effects of SAL produced small biochemical effects, did not potentiate the action of DA receptor antagonists, counteracted the action of DA receptor agonists and bound to agonistic sites of DA receptors. | Antkiewicz-Michaluk et al. ( | ||
| 100 mg/kg b.w. (Sigma-Aldrich, USA) in 0.9% NaCl | single i.p. injection or for 18 days | male Wistar rat, 190–220 g | A single dose of SAL did not affect the DA metabolism in the substantia nigra and NAc, but remarkably increased the homovanillic acid concentration in the striatum (by 55%). The effects of chronic treatment were limited to extrapyramidal structures, and resulted in a remarkable depletion of DA (by 62% in the substantia nigra and by 33% in the striatum), concomitant with the decline of DA metabolites. | Antkiewicz-Michaluk et al. ( |
| 1, 3, 10, 30 mg/kg b.w. (Sigma-Aldrich, USA) in 0.9% NaCl | single i.p. injection | male Sprague-Dawley rats, 170–220 g | SAL might have some rewarding effect, potentiated by psychological stress. The rewarding effect of SAL especially under psychological stress might involve the endogenous central opioid system. | Matsuzawa et al. ( |
| 1 mmol (synthetized according to Teitel et al, | 40-min infusion into the striatum | male Wistar rats, N/A | The concentration of serotonin in the rat striatum increased from undetectable level to 2.53 +/- 0.12 and 3.69 +/- 0.01 μmol after perfusion of (R)- and (S)-SAL, respectively. SAL increased extracellular dopamine levels but to a much lesser degree than serotonin. | Maruyama et al. ( |
| 20 mg/kg b.w. (N/A) | single i.p. injection | male Wistar rats, N/A | SAL should not be able to cross the blood brain barrier since SAL administered intraperitoneally did not result in measurable brain SAL or mono-O-methyl-salsolinol levels. | Origitano et al. ( |
| 0.4 mmol/kg b.w. (N/A) | single i.p. injection | rats, N/A | SAL administration resulted in levels of 1-2 nmol/g in striatum and limbic forebrain after 2 h, whereas the corresponding liver values were about 550 nmol/g. Control animals showed SAL values in liver of about 2 nmol/g and in striatum and limbic forebrain 1 nmol/g tissue. | Sjöquist and Magnuson ( |
| 250 μg (synthesized by the method of the Pictet- Spengler condensation of dopamine with an aldehyde) in 0.9% NaCl | single i.c.v. injection | male Wistar rat, 180–250 g | SAL induced rise in striatal dopamine was prevented by alpha-methyl-p-tyrosine pretreatment while SAL induced fall in diencephalic noradrenaline was not affected. SAL was found to cause hypothermia. | Awazi and Guldberg ( |
| 0.2-3.0 mg/kg (synthetized according to Craig et al, | single i.v. injection | adult male and female vagotomised cats, N/A | SAL produced agonist effects at cholinoceptors and alpha- and beta-adrenoceptors. In anesthetized cats, SAL (0.2-3.0 mg/kg) produced dose-related falls in mean blood pressure and a fall in heart rate. These effects were antagonized by atropine (1 mg/kg). In atropinized animals, both SAL caused dose-related elevations in mean blood pressure that were blocked by phentolamine (2 mg/kg). SAL produced a reduction in the tension and degree of fusion of the incomplete tetanic contractions of the soleus muscle, an effect antagonized by propranolol (0.4 mg/kg). | Rodger et al. ( |
| 10, 20, 40 or 240 μg (Sigma-Aldrich, USA) in Krebs-Ringer with 0.01% ascorbic acid | single intracisternal injection | male and female mice after 18 generations of genetic selection for alcohol sensitivity, N/A | Low doses of SAL produced significantly lower activity levels in the alcohol-sensitive long-sleep (LS) line than in the alcohol-insensitive short-sleep (SS) line. A hypnotic dose of SAL induced significantly longer sleeptimes in the LS line than in the SS line. | Church et al. ( |
| 0.038 or 0.38 mM (Sigma-Aldrich, USA) in aCSF | hippocampal perfusion | adult male and female Sprague-Dawley rats, 300–550 g | SAL enhanced the efflux of 45Ca2+ in a concentration-dependent manner during the interval of its perfusion within the hippocampal plane. | Myers et al. ( |
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| 1 mg/ml (15 μg/60 μl each infusion) in Ringer–Locke (synthesised at Institute of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, University of Szeged, Hungary) | a series of five 30-min infusions at 30-min intervals to the third ventricle | mature Polish Longwool sheep (3–4 years old), N/A | SAL stimulated oxytocin secretion during lactation in sheep. | Górski et al. ( |
| 5 mg/kg b.w. (synthesised at Institute of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, University of Szeged, Hungary) in 0.9% NaCl | single i.v. injection | male Shiba goats, ~25.3 kg | Hypothalamic DA blunted the SAL-induced release of PRL in male goats, regardless of the photoperiod, which suggested that both SAL and DA were involved in regulating the secretion of PRL in goats. | Jin et al. ( |
| male Shiba goats, ~ 20 kg | DA inhibited the SAL-induced release of PRL in male goats, which suggested that SAL and DA are involved in regulating the secretion of PRL. | Hashizume et al. ( | ||
| female Shiba goats, ~27.7 kg | A long photoperiod highly enhanced the PRL-releasing response to SAL in either medium or low ambient temperature in goats. | Yaegashi et al. ( | ||
| 5 μg in total/animal (synthesised at Institute of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, University of Szeged, Hungary) in Ringer-Locke | a series of five 30-min i.c.v. infusions at 30-min intervals | mature Longwool sheep, N/A | SAL might play a role as a neuromodulator for the hypothalamic NE and DA systems and as a signal transmitter for the pituitary PRL release. | Misztal et al. ( |
| 50 ng oraz 50 μg in total/animal (Sigma-Aldrich, USA) in Ringer-Locke | a series of five 10-min i.c.v. infusions at 20-min intervals | mature ewes during the second month of pregnancy, N/A | SAL infused at the higher dose significantly increased plasma PRL concentration in lactating ewes. SAL in the process of stimulation of PRL release during lactation and that hypothalamic PRL might play an important role in the central mechanisms of adaptation to lactation. | Górski et al. ( |
| 50 ng oraz 50 μg in total/anaimal (Sigma-Aldrich, USA) in Ringer-Locke | nursing Polish Longwool sheep, 50–55 kg | SAL might affect the regulatory process of growth hormone secretion in lactating sheep but its role might not to be major. | Górski et al. ( | |
| 5 mg/kg b.w. (for i.v.) or 10 mg/calf (for IIIv) synthesised at Institute of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, University of Szeged, Hungary) in 0.9% NaCl | single i.v. or i.c.v. injection | Japanese male and female calves, ~144 kg and Japanese Black cows, ~418 kg and castrated Holstein calves, ~204 kg | SAL was involved in the regulatory process for the secretion of PRL, not only in male and female calves, but also in cows. The potency of the PRL-releasing response to SAL differed with the physiological status of cattle. | Hashizume et al. ( |
| 5 mg/kg b.w. (synthesised at Institute of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, University of Szeged, Hungary) in 0.9% NaCl | three consecutive i.v. injections at 2 h intervals | Shiba goats, ~27 kg | The mechanism(s) by which SAL released PRL were different from the mechanism of action of TRH. The secretion of PRL was under the inhibitory control of DA and SAL did not antagonize the DA receptor’s action. | Hashizume et al. ( |
| single i.v. injection | female Shiba goats, ~26 kg | SAL was able to stimulate the release of PRL in ruminants. The additive effect of SAL and TRH on the release of PRL detected | Hashizume et al. ( | |
| 5 or 10 mg/kg b.w. – for i.v. or 1 or 5 mg/calf – for i.c.v. (Sigma-Aldrich, USA) in 0.9% NaCl | single i.v. or i.c.v. injection | female Shiba goats, ~15 kg; castrated Holstein calves, ~172 kg | SAL was present in extract of the PP gland of ruminants and had PRL-releasing activity both | Hashizume et al. ( |
Fig. 2Tetrahydroisoquinolines capable of crossing the blood–brain barrier: a 1,2,3,4-tetrahydroisoquinoline, b 5,6,7,8-tetrahydroisoquinoline, c 1,2-dimethyl-6,7-dihydroxy-1,2,3,4-tetrahydroisoquinoline, d 2-methyl-6,7-dihydroxy-1,2,3,4-tetrahydroisoquinoline, e 1-methyl-1,2,3,4-tetrahydroisoquinoline, f 1-benzyl-1,2,3,4-tetrahydroisoquinoline, shown for structural comparison (ChemDraw Professional 16.0, PerkinElmer Informatics, Inc.)