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OCCURRENCE AND LOCALIZATION OF BRAIN PHENOLSULPHOTRANSFERASE

56

Citations

9

References

1974

Year

Abstract

Abstract —Rat brain contains the enzyme which forms sulphate conjugates of phenols, phenolsulphotransferase (EC 2.8.2.1), but the physiological role of the enzyme is unclear. The enzyme is unevenly distributed in rat brain, with the activity 13 times higher in the hypothalamus than in the cerebellum. Phenolsulphotransferase does not seem to be primarily located in glial cells. Cultured cells (type C6 astrocytoma) derived from rat glia had less than 1 per cent of the phenolsulphotransferase activity of whole rat brain. Sulphate conjugation of neutral compounds may be important in their removal from brain. The pineal and pituitary glands, areas outside the blood‐brain barrier had very low phenolsulphotransferase activity. The activity of the enzyme in brain varied widely among different species: rabbit and rat had much higher levels of activity than mouse or frog; the activity in human brain was intermediate. Phenolsulphotransferase also occurred in other organs, including liver, heart, testes, lung, spleen, salivary glands, and intact or decentralized superior cervical ganglion. There was no correlation of enzyme activity with adrenergic or cholinergic innervation, or with the known roles of various tissues in drug metabolism or detoxification. The enzyme activity does not seem to be under neuronal control since ganglionectomy did not affect the phenolsulphotransferase activity of salivary glands. The precise localization of phenolsulphotransferase remains to be established, as well as the physiological importance of sulphate conjugation of phenols in brain and other organs.

References

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