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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Demonstration of the ascorbate dependence of membrane-bound dopamine beta-monooxygenase in adrenal chromaffin granule ghosts.

Chromaffin granule ghosts from bovine adrenal medullae have been used to examine the ability of membrane-bound dopamine beta-monooxygenase to interact directly with intravesicular ascorbate and to investigate vectorial electron transfer from external ascorbate across the ghost membrane. Ghosts prepared by a modification of published procedures were shown to be fully active in both dopamine uptake and norepinephrine production. Dopamine uptake is dependent on the presence of a magnesium and ATP ionic complex, is abolished by reserpine, and reaches a steady-state level in the presence of dopamine beta-monooxygenase, ascorbate, catalase, and fumarate. Omission of ascorbate either inside or outside the ghosts greatly enhances dopamine accumulation, which reaches levels of approximately 30 nmol/mg under these conditions. Correspondingly, in the presence of all components, norepinephrine production reached approximately 100 nmol/mg in 30 min of incubation. Norepinephrine production was strictly magnesium-ATP-dependent, inhibited by either reserpine or dopamine beta-monooxygenase inactivation, and was markedly reduced when ascorbate was omitted from either inside or outside the ghosts. In the presence of limiting amounts of internal ascorbate, rapid norepinephrine production occurred which corresponded to the amount of initial ascorbate present, followed by a much slower endogenous norepinephrine production observable after complete depletion of internal ascorbate. The endogenous rate of norepinephrine production likely represents epinephrine-supported dopamine beta-monooxygenase turnover. Taken together, the data demonstrate that facile norepinephrine production by membrane-bound dopamine beta-monooxygenase occurs only when internal ascorbate is present, terminates upon depletion of internal ascorbate, and can only be sustained at a significant rate when reducing equivalents from external ascorbate are available.[1]

References

  1. Demonstration of the ascorbate dependence of membrane-bound dopamine beta-monooxygenase in adrenal chromaffin granule ghosts. Herman, H.H., Wimalasena, K., Fowler, L.C., Beard, C.A., May, S.W. J. Biol. Chem. (1988) [Pubmed]
 
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