The cytotoxicity of dopamine may be an artefact of cell culture
Journal of Neurochemistry 81(3): 414-421
Article 2002 English
Authors
MC
Marie‐Véronique Clément
LL
Lee Hua Long
JR
Jeyakumar Ramalingam
Abstract
1 min read
Administration of l ‐DOPA is commonly used to treat Parkinson's disease, yet controversy continues as to whether the dopamine arising from it aggravates neuronal loss. Several authors have reported cytotoxic effects of l ‐DOPA and dopamine on cultured cells, but others have not. In this report using the rat pheochromocytoma cell line PC12 and the M14 human melanoma cell line we show that dopamine‐mediated cell death is not specific for neuronal cells. Moreover, our data show that both l ‐DOPA and dopamine interact with commonly used cell culture media, undergoing oxidation to generate hydrogen peroxide and dopamine semiquinones/quinones. Catalase and reduced glutathione could protect against cytotoxicity. These results suggest that caution needs to be employed when using cell culture studies to predict effects of l ‐DOPA and/or dopamine in vivo because of the extracellular generation of reactive species in the culture media.
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.