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  2. L-Theanine Effectively Protects Against Copper-Facilitated Dopamine Oxidation: Implication for Relieving Dopamine Overflow-Associated Neurotoxicities

L-Theanine Effectively Protects Against Copper-Facilitated Dopamine Oxidation: Implication for Relieving Dopamine Overflow-Associated Neurotoxicities

  • Mol Neurobiol. 2024 Nov 5. doi: 10.1007/s12035-024-04601-x.
Fuming Wang # 1 Xiaoyu Huang # 1 Wenping Wang # 1 Xiuli Li 1 Meng Hao 1 Ethan Will Taylor 2 Jinsong Zhang 3
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 State Key Laboratory of Tea Plant Biology and Utilization, School of Tea & Food Science, Joint Research Center for Food Nutrition and Health of IHM, Anhui Agricultural University, Hefei, 230036, China.
  • 2 Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of North Carolina at Greensboro, Greensboro, NC, 27402, USA.
  • 3 State Key Laboratory of Tea Plant Biology and Utilization, School of Tea & Food Science, Joint Research Center for Food Nutrition and Health of IHM, Anhui Agricultural University, Hefei, 230036, China. zjs@ahau.edu.cn.
  • # Contributed equally.
Abstract

Non-physiological disorders release dopamine into extracellular brain fluid to induce neurodegenerative brain diseases. The harmful mechanism of dopamine overflow is attributed to the dopamine-mediated production of hydroxyl radicals, suggesting that transition metal copper which is high in the brain is involved in promoting dopamine oxidation. MPP+ , an intermediate formed from the conversion of MPTP, is one of the most potent dopamine-releasing agents. It has been reported that L-theanine could improve motor dysfunction in MPTP-treated mice, suggesting that L-theanine may restrain copper-mediated oxidation of released dopamine. The present study examined the influences of L-theanine on extracellular dopamine-mediated cytotoxicity in the absence and presence of copper in SH-SY5Y cells. L-theanine significantly but only moderately suppressed cytotoxicity caused by dopamine alone. Surprisingly, dopamine together with copper rapidly and dramatically caused apoptotic responses by massively disrupting redox homeostasis. Nonetheless, L-theanine exhibited an extraordinary protective effect against these devastating events by chelating copper. The above great contrast in terms of copper could be recapitulated in a cell-free system. Though L-theanine reduced dopamine autoxidation as detected by HPLC, the capacity was not impressive, since a molar ratio of 10,000 (L-theanine to dopamine) was required for fully suppressing dopamine decrease. However, HPLC measurement showed that L-theanine was highly efficient in suppressing copper-mediated dopamine oxidation because only a molar ratio of 10 was required for fully suppressing dopamine decrease. Since copper plays a crucial role in promoting extracellular dopamine oxidation, our results suggest that L-theanine by chelating copper is an attractive food-based protective agent against dopamine overflow.

Keywords

Chelation; Copper; Dopamine overflow; L-theanine; Neurotoxicities.

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