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The utilization of choline and acetyl coenzyme A for the synthesis of acetylcholine.
Jope RS, Jenden DJ.
Acetylcholine synthesis in rat brain synaptosomes was investigated with regard to the
intracellular sources of its two precursors, acetyl coenzyme A and choline. Investigations
with alpha-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamate, an inhibitor of mitochondrial pyruvate transport, indicated
that pyruvate must be utilized by pyruvate dehydrogenase located in the mitochondria, rather
than in the cytoplasm, as recently proposed. Evidence for a small, intracellular pool of choline
available for acetylcholine synthesis was obtained under three experimental conditions.
(1) Bromopyruvate competitively inhibited high-affinity choline transport, perhaps because of
accumulation of intracellular choline which was not acetylated when acetyl coenzyme A
production was blocked. (2) Choline that was accumulated under high-affinity transport
conditions while acetyl coenzyme A production was impaired was subsequently acetylated
when acetyl coenzyme A production was resumed. (3) Newly synthesized acetylcholine had a
lower specific activity than that of choline in the medium. These results indicate that
the acetyl coenzyme A that is used for the synthesis of acetylcholine is derived from
mitochondrial pyruvate dehydrogenase and that there is a small pool of choline within
cholinergic nerve endings available for acetylcholine synthesis, supporting the proposal
that the high-affinity transport and acetylation of choline are kinetically coupled.
© 1999-2008 Coenzyme-A Tech. Inc. All rights reserved.
These statements have not been evaluated
by the U.S. Food & Drug Administration (FDA).
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