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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2004
September
Serotonin metabolites in mollusks
suggest pathways for human therapies
Molly
McElroy, News Bureau
217-333-5802; mmcelroy@uiuc.edu
9/9/04
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| Photo
by Kwame Ross |
| Clockwise
from top left: Jeffrey Stuart, doctoral student in the department
of chemistry; Stanislav S. Rubakhin, senior research scientist
at the Beckman Institute; Jennifer A. Jakubowski and Elena
Romanoava, both doctoral students in the department of chemistry.
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CHAMPAIGN,
Ill. — From
mollusks to mammals, newly discovered chemical pathways of serotonin
in the nervous system are paving a path toward future pharmaceutical
treatments for depression and other disorders.
“Understanding novel serotonin pathways in a tissue-dependent
manner is useful for the development of pharmaceuticals intended to
preserve serotonergic signaling,” said Jeffrey N. Stuart, a doctoral
student in the department of chemistry
at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
Recent
findings by Stuart and his Illinois colleagues were the topic of a talk,
“Characterization of Novel Serotonin Biochemical Pathways for
Potential Therapeutic Applications,” last month at the American
Chemical Society’s 228th National Meeting in Philadelphia and
of a paper in the August issue of the Journal of Neurochemistry.
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| Photo
by Stanislav Rubakhin |
| Marine
mollusk Aplysia californica used in the experiment
are considered ideal model systems to study serotonin processing
because they have simpler nervous systems than mammals. "They
have larger, more easily identified neurons," researcher
Jeffrey Stuart said. More
mollusk information and photos. |
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Serotonin
(5-hydroxytryptamine, or 5-HT) is a neurotransmitter present throughout
the body. When nerve cells containing it are activated, serotonin is
released. It travels and stimulates other nerve cells, enabling their
message to spread through the nervous system.
“When serotonin is released, you do not want its signal to last
forever,” said Jonathan Sweedler, professor of chemistry and Stuart’s
academic adviser. The signal caused by serotonin is turned off by enzymes
that inactivate it by converting it into various metabolites, such as
the ones discovered by Stuart.
Disruptions of serotonin signaling pathways are thought to occur in
disorders such as depression, anxiety, sudden infant death syndrome,
attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and irritable bowel syndrome.
Many pharmaceutical treatments restore the pathways by preventing the
cellular uptake of serotonin, where it is converted to other metabolites,
or by directly inhibiting the enzymes responsible for the molecular
conversion.
Because serotonin is distributed throughout the body, pharmaceuticals
intended to correct serotonin imbalances in a specific tissue, such
as in the brain, ultimately take effect in other tissues as well. That
potentially leads to unwanted side effects.
Stuart, using a detection system built to measure serotonin and related
compounds, found two new serotonin metabolites in the nervous system
of marine mollusks. The metabolites were in separate yet adjacent body
tissues, suggesting, he said, that different chemical pathways exist
to convert serotonin.
“Characterization of site-specific serotonin pathways could provide
novel means by which to more precisely target tissue-specific diseases
related to 5-HT, such as in the brain or enteric nervous system,”
he said. “Because enzymes exist in mammals that can convert serotonin
into metabolites, future treatments of nervous system disorders could
exploit these pathways so that only a specific pathway in a specific
tissue is affected.”
Marine mollusks, such as the species Aplysia californica and Pleurobranchaea
californica that were used in these experiments, are considered to be
ideal model systems to study serotonin processing because they have
simpler nervous systems than mammals. “They have larger, more
easily identified neurons,” Stuart said.
Mollusks are also good model systems because they show some mammal-like
qualities that influence behavior, such as learning and memory, a discovery
for which the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was awarded in 2000
to Eric Kandel of Columbia University in New York. Kandel studied how
learning behavior was related to serotonergic and other signaling pathways
in Aplysia californica, which are sea slugs the color of a purple plum
that range up to a melon in size.
Aplysia californica live in warm, shallow water off the California coast
in areas rich in vegetation where they feed on algae. Pleurobranchaea
californica live in the cold, dark depths of the ocean floor, “and
each one resembles a wet brown paper bag with the appetite and table
manners of a hyena,” said Rhanor Gillette, a professor in the
department of molecular
and integrative physiology at Illinois. He collaborated with Stuart
and Sweedler to study how serotonin metabolites relate to behavior.
As predators, Pleurobranchaea feed voraciously on marine animals, including
other Pleurobranchaea, ocean-bottom dwelling invertebrates and some
fish. The Pleurobranchaea used in the Illinois research are captured
in trawl nets off the southern California coast.
Like Aplysia, Pleurobranchaea also display learning and memory behaviors
influenced by serotonin. “Serotonin is a major factor in organizing
the behavior of Pleurobranchaea, particularly for feeding,” Gillette
said.
“Some potential prey have dangerous, stinging defenses. In a single
encounter, Pleurobranchaea learn to avoid their odor, Pleurobranchaea
learn to avoid it by doing a characteristic avoidance turn during subsequent
encounters. We are working with the serotonin pathways that underlie
the odor learning.”
Stuart reported at the ACS meeting that hungry Pleurobranchaea had more
serotonin sulfate, one of the newly discovered serotonin metabolites,
which could indicate that serotonin sulfate is a signal for hunger.
Stuart and Jason Ebaugh, a doctoral student in the neuroscience
program, measured the blood levels of serotonin sulfate as a time-of-day
function. It may be important for growth, most of which occurs during
sleep, Gillette said. It’s possible that the role of serotonin
sulfate in marine mollusks is similar to melatonin, which resests the
circadian clock in humans, Stuart and colleagues suggested in the Journal
of Neurochemistry.
“This is the first quantitative measure of how serotonin metabolites
are related to a behavioral state in marine mollusks,” Sweedler
said. “What we do not know is whether serotonin sulfate causes
the behavior or whether the behavior causes the elevation of serotonin
sulfate.”
Other contributors to the research are Leah Squires, Elena Romanova,
Jennifer Jakubowski and Xin Zhang, all doctoral students in the department
of chemistry; postdoctoral fellows Stanislav Rubakhin and Nathan Hatcher,
both in chemistry; and undergraduate biochemistry
major Ashley Copes.
The National Institutes of Health funded the research. Stuart also was
supported by an ACS fellowship.
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