| Literature DB >> 29740267 |
Abstract
N,N-dimethyltryptamine (Entities:
Keywords: N,N-dimethyltryptamine (DMT); consciousness; indolethylamine-N-methyltransferase (INMT); polymorphisms; psychedelics
Year: 2018 PMID: 29740267 PMCID: PMC5924808 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2018.00232
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
Figure 1Enzymatic pathways involved in the synthesis of the endogenous DMTs. Dietary tryptophan is the precursor for synthesis of serotonin (5-HT), melatonin, DMT, and 5-HO-DMT (bufotenine). DMT is synthesized via decarboxylation of tryptophan by AADC to produce tryptamine which is then double-methylated utilizing AdoMet as a methyl donor (rightmost pathway). Tryptophan can also be converted to 5-HT via hydroxylation by tryptophan hydroxylase and decarboxylation by AADC (leftmost pathway). 5-HT can be converted to melatonin via addition of an acetyl group by N-acetyl transferase and methylation by 5-hydroxyindole-O-methyltransferase, or can alternatively be converted to bufotenine via methylation by INMT. Polymorphisms in these enzymes, the receptors their products bind to (e.g., 5-HT2A), and/or the metabolic enzymes that degrade their products (e.g., MAO) could affect the levels and effects of the endogenous DMTs through multiple permutations of SNPs as discussed throughout the manuscript.
Figure 2Alterations to the human INMT protein coding region due to single nucleotide polymorphisms. Current literature was consulted to identify amino acid residues in mammalian INMT likely critical to structure/function. The block black arrows at the far left denote the human INMT amino acid reference sequence. Numbers on the far left and right below each row indicate first and last residue numbers in that row. Sequence conservation in human INMT across the mammalian species outlined in Methods is reported underneath each amino acid of the reference sequence as “*”= a fully-conserved residue, “:”= a strongly similar residue, and “.”= a weakly conserved residue. Non-conservation of an amino acid is denoted by absence of these symbols. The amino acids highlighted in yellow are highly conserved regions across the mammalian species compared as well as conserved across methyltransferase enzymes that utilize AdoMet. The amino acids highlighted in light blue are the N-terminal helix-loop-helix region reported to function as an allosteric binding site in hINMT. Residues boxed in red were found to be important to tryptamine binding in rINMT and are conserved in humans; those boxed in light blue represent the same for AdoMet binding. The blue arrows are exon sites. Synonymous SNPs in an amino acid are denoted via underlining of that residue. Missense mutations appear as red amino acid residues in the reference sequence, and the resulting change in this residue is indicated by the letter(s) appearing directly above the red reference residue. A “+” above a reference sequence residue indicates a reported nonsense mutation. Point mutations leading to frame shifts are shown in blue as the resultant altered amino acid residue above the corresponding reference residue. SNPs validated by either multiple independent submissions, the HapMap project and/or the 1000Genome project are denoted by italics or angular underlines. Reported frequencies of each synonymous and nonsynonymous SNP are as follows: black = unknown, brown = <1%, green = 1–10%, red = >10%. No frequencies for frameshift point mutations (blue letters above the reference sequence) were currently reported. Multiple SNPs were often observed at the same reference amino acid residue; e.g., a SNP, in residue 58, threonine (red T), can change the residue to methionine (brown M) at a reported frequency of <1%, whereas a synonymous SNP and a frameshift mutation resulting in a change to isoleucine (blue I) are also reported at unknown frequencies at residue 58. Reported frequencies of SNPs are fluid, and the dbSNP database should be re-examined often to make updates to this figure to match up-to-date literature and subsequent additions to or retractions from the database.
Summary of biochemical assays on INMT from studies reviewed.
| Reference | Human | Tryptamine | 850 | Chu et al., | |
| Uncertain | Rabbit | [14C-CH3]AdoMet + tryptamine | 852 | Lung homogenate | Chu et al., |
| Uncertain | Rabbit | [14C-CH3]AdoMet + tryptamine + DMT | 1,618 | Lung homogenate | Chu et al., |
| Reference | Rabbit | [14C-CH3]AdoMet + tryptamine | 430 | COS-1 | Thompson et al., |
| Trp138 | Rabbit | [14C-CH3]AdoMet + tryptamine | 3,500 | COS-1 | Thompson et al., |
| Pro202 | Rabbit | [14C-CH3]AdoMet + tryptamine | 1,270 | COS-1 | Thompson et al., |
| Reference | Rabbit | [14C-CH3]AdoMet + tryptamine | 270 | COS-1 | Thompson et al., |
| Val205/Glu219 | Human | [14C-CH3]AdoMet + tryptamine | 2,920 | COS-1 | Thompson et al., |
| Met205/Gly219 | Human | [14C-CH3]AdoMet + tryptamine | 2,920 | COS-1 | Thompson et al., |
| Uncertain | Human | Tryptamine | 430 | Lung homogenate | Räisänen and Kärkkäinen, |
Figure 3SNPs in James Watson's INMT isoform 1 and DDC isoform 2 from UCSC Genome Browser. (A) SNPs found in James Watson's INMT isoform 1. Coding region SNPs are in black and seen in exons 1 and 3 as noted: D28N, M205V, E219G, and F254C. These SNPs are discussed in detail in the text. The INMT sequence highlighted black reflects isoform 1. (B) SNPs found in James Watson's DDC isoform 2. The DDC sequence highlighted blue at the top of the figure reflects isoform 2. The two genes are not shown comparatively to scale.