Molecular biology of catecholamine-related enzymes in relation to Parkinson's disease

Cell Mol Neurobiol. 1999 Feb;19(1):57-66. doi: 10.1023/a:1006912523846.

Abstract

1. Catecholamine (dopamine, norepinephrine, and epinephrine) biosynthesis is regulated by tyrosine hydroxylase (TH). TH activity is regulated by the concentration of the cofactor tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4), whose level is regulated by GTP cyclohydrolase I (GCH) activity. Thus, GCH activity indirectly regulates TH activity and catecholamine levels. 2. TH activity in the nigrostriatal dopaminergic neurons is most sensitive to the decrease in BH4. 3. Mutations of GCH result in reductions in GCH activity, BH4, TH activity, and dopamine, causing either recessively inherited GCH deficiency or dominantly inherited hereditary progressive dystonia [HPD; Segawa's disease; also called dopa-responsive dystonia (DRD)]. 4. In juvenile parkinsonism and Parkinson's disease, which have dopamine deficiency in the basal ganglia as HPD/DRD, the GCH gene may be normal, and the molecular mechanism of the dopamine deficiency in the basal ganglia is different from that in HPD/DRD.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Catecholamines / biosynthesis*
  • Catecholamines / genetics
  • Catecholamines / metabolism
  • Humans
  • Parkinson Disease / enzymology*
  • Parkinson Disease / genetics

Substances

  • Catecholamines