catecholamines
Adrenaline is commonly associated with feelings of anxiety, stress, anger, and excitement (‘the adrenaline flowed’). The term ‘fight or flight’ is well-known in this context. While the overall picture is very complicated, it is clear that the catecholamines produced within the body play important roles in adapting the cardiovascular and other systems to an individual's changing needs in response to physical activity as well as to stressful or threatening events. They have these effects both by means of release as neurotransmitters from nerve endings of the sympathetic division of the autonomic nervous system or within the central nervous system, and also by discharge into the bloodstream from the adrenal medulla.
The different catecholamines, although closely related structurally, can have widely differing physiological and pharmacological properties; can only be explained if the systems with which they interact have finely evolved ways of distinguishing between them and of coupling them to different cellular events. The differences are not only between the effects of the different substances on similar cells, but between the effects of any one of the catecholamines on different cells, or on the same cells under different conditions.
Adrenaline and noradrenaline
In 1948, in an attempt to provide a framework for explaining the different effects of noradrenaline and adrenaline, Ahlquist proposed the presence of several membrane receptors (adrenoceptors), coupled to different responses in the various target organs and tissues. His system, refined and extended, has stood the test of time. The two basic types are called α- and β-adrenoceptors, with main subdivisions into α1 and α2 and β1 and β2 but even further sub-divisions exist. Two major dopamine receptors, D1 and D2, have been identified and, again, further receptors and subdivisions have been proposed. All these receptors mediate the actions of catecholamines on target cells by activating intracellular messengers. These trigger the appropriate mechanism controlling the response, which might be contraction or relaxation of smooth muscles (including those of blood vessels, bronchioles, or gut), or stimulation of enzyme action or of glandular secretion. It follows that the physiological and pharmacological actions of catecholamines can most effectively be described if their relative potencies on the different adrenoceptors, as well as the number and distribution of the adrenoceptors in the various organs and tissues, are known.With few exceptions, the order of potency on α-adrenoceptors is noradrenaline, adrenaline, isoprenaline, while on the β-adrenoceptor, the order is reversed. Indeed, isoprenaline has virtually no effect on α-adrenoceptors. On the other hand, α-methylnoradrenaline is selective for α2-adrenoceptors.
α1-adrenoceptors are found on the cell membranes of smooth muscle, liver, salivary glands, and sweat glands, and on nerve cells in the central nervous system. When activated, they stimulate a sequence of chemical events of which the end result is mainly the release of calcium ions inside the cell, and this in turn mediates the final action. α2-adrenoceptors are sited on nerve endings, both in those neurons that use noradrenaline as their neurotransmitter and other neurons that do not. They can also be found on smooth muscle where they mediate contraction. In the CNS, stimulation of α2-adrenoceptors lowers blood pressure and causes sedation and even unconsciousness. The sequence of events that follows activation of α2-adrenoceptors results in a reduction in the formation of cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) and this in turn mediates the ultimate effect.
β1-adrenoceptors are the most important adrenoceptors in the heart, where they mediate increase in heart rate and force. They relax gut smooth muscle, cause breakdown of fat, and cause amylase secretion from salivary glands. On nerve endings, they increase transmitter release. β2-adrenoceptors are on smooth muscle, including blood vessels, bronchioles, uterus, bladder, and the iris, where they mediate relaxation. They cause tremor in skeletal muscle (shivering) and the breakdown of glycogen in the liver to release glucose into the blood, and decrease histamine release from mast cells.
Dopamine
Dopamine exerts its actions via the D1 and D2 receptors, which reside very largely in the CNS. It has much less effect than either noradrenaline or adrenaline on either α- or β-adrenoceptors (because it lacks the β-hydroxyl group which these others have on the side chain). The vast majority of dopaminergic nerves (those which release dopamine as their neurotransmitter, at synapses with other neurons) are restricted to 3 pathways in the CNS, related to movement co-ordination, to thought, feeling, and behaviour, and to the control of hormone release from the anterior pituitary gland. There are related abnormalities: decrease in dopamine release in the first pathway (or the administration of drugs which block the action of dopamine) leads to disturbances of movement associated with Parkinson's disease; excess dopamine activity in the brain leads to stereotyped behaviours in experimental animals and may account for some of the symptoms of schizophrenia in man; dopamine, and drugs that mimic it, cause nausea and vomiting through an action on a trigger zone in the brain stem. Its action on the pituitary leads to reduced prolactin and increased growth hormone release. It causes vasodilatation of blood vessels in the kidney and mesentery through interaction with dopamine receptors, vasoconstriction elsewhere via α1-adrenoceptors, and stimulation of the heart via β1-adrenoceptors.Endogenous catecholamines are synthesized in neurons and in the chromaffin cells of the adrenal medulla, and stored in intracellular vesicles. Dopamine is formed first from the aminoacid, tyrosine. Dopamine is the immediate precursor of noradrenaline, which is in turn the precursor of adrenaline. This full sequence takes place only in chromaffin tissue, where all three substances are made, and in a relatively small number of truly ‘adrenergic’ nerves in the CNS, which release adrenaline as their transmitter. Nearly all so-called ‘adrenergic neurons’ (comprising most of the final or ‘post-ganglionic’ sympathetic nerve supply to the various tissues) are, in reality, ‘noradrenergic’, because they release noradrenaline as their transmitter and are unable to synthesize adrenaline. Likewise, ‘dopaminergic’ neurons release dopamine and cannot make either noradrenaline or adrenaline.
The actions of catecholamines after their release are terminated by their re-uptake into the sympathetic nerve endings and into certain non-neuronal cells such as smooth muscle. After re-uptake in nerve cells they are broken down by the action of monoamine oxidase; this enzyme plays a vital role in controlling the concentrations of catecholamine transmitters while scavenging and destroying unwanted amines. Catecholamines taken up by cells other than neurons are also degraded by enzymes. The combined product of these actions on both noradrenaline and adrenaline is vanilmandelic acid, which appears in normal urine. Raised excretion of vanilmandelic acid can indicate the presence of a catecholamine-secreting tumour.
B. A. Callingham
See also adrenal gland; autonomic nervous system; neurotransmitters.
Catecholamines
CATECHOLAMINES
The catecholamines are a series of structurally similar amines (e.g., Dopamine, epinephrine, Norepinephrine that function as hormones, as Neurotransmitters, or both. Catecholamines are produced by the enzymatic conversion of tyrosine, sharing the chemical root of 3, 4-dihydroxyphenylethanolamine. The three major catecholamines (mentioned above) derive from sequential enzymatic reactions-tyrosine is converted to dihydroxyphenylacetic acid (dopa); dopa, which is not an end product but a common intermediate (and the medication of choice for Parkinson's disease), is converted to dopamine; dopamine is converted to noradrenaline (also called norepinephrine); and noradrenaline is converted to adrenaline (also called epinephrine). These substances are the neurotransmitters for the sympathetic neurons (nerve cells) of the autonomic nervous system, as well as for three separate broad sets of brain neuropathways.
Floyd Bloom