Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, Vol.283, No.5, 1069-1076, 2001
Possible role of salsolinol quinone methide in the decrease of RCSN-3 cell survival
The endogenous dopamine-derived neurotoxin salsolinol was found to decrease survival in the dopaminergic neuronal cell line RCSN-3, derived from adult rat substantia nigra in a concentration-dependent manner (208 muM salsolinol induced a 50% survival decrease). Incubation of RCSN-3 cells with 100 muM dicoumarol and salsolinol significantly decreased cell survival by 2.5-fold (P < 0.001), contrasting with a negligible effect on RCHT cells, which exhibited nearly a 5-fold lower nomifensine-insensitive dopamine uptake. The levels of catalase and glutathione peroxidase mRNA were decreased when RCSN-3 cells were treated with 100 M salsolinol alone or in the presence of 100 muM dicoumarol, In vitro oxidation of salsolinol to o-quinone catalyzed by lactoperoxidase gave the quinone methide and 1,2-dihydro-1-methyl-6,7-isoquinoline diol as final products of salsolinol oxidation as determined by NMR analysis. Evidence of the formation of salsolinol o-semiquinone radical has been provided by ESR studies during one-electron oxidation of salsolinol catalyzed by lactoperoxidase.
Keywords:salsolinol;quinone methide;dopamine;DAT;DT-diaphorase;lactoperoxidase;dicoumarol;catalase;glutathione peroxidase;substantia nigra