D. Edwards
Sep 18, 1978
Citations
0
Influential Citations
19
Citations
Quality indicators
Journal
Life sciences
Abstract
Abstract The characteristics of phenylethanolamine as both a competitive inhibitor and as a substrate for monoamine oxidase (MAO) were studied using rat brain and liver homogenates. Although phenylethanolamine, even at high concentrations (1 mM), produced minimal inhibition of MAO when serotonin (a substrate for type A MAO) was used as the substrate, it was a potent competitive inhibitor (Ki=11 μM) of the deamination of phenylethylamine (a substrate for type B MAO). When phenylethanolamine was used as a substrate, deprenyl, a selective inhibitor of type B MAO, was found to produce a single sigmoid inhibition curve at low concentrations of the inhibitor (pI50=7.5). These results indicate that phenylethanolamine is a specific substrate for type B MAO. Identification of the products formed under the assay conditions show that phenylethanolamine is converted to both mandelic acid and phenylethylene glycol by liver homogenates but only to the latter, neutral metabolite by brain homogenates.