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  6. <strong>
  7. Tryptophan, serotonin, and aging</strong>
  8. </p>
  9. <p>
  10. Beginning with the industrial production of glutamic acid (sold as MSG, monosodium glutamate), the public
  11. has been systematically misinformed about the effects of amino acids in the diet. The FDA has been
  12. industry's powerful ally in misleading the public. Despite research that clearly showed that adults
  13. assimilate whole proteins more effectively than free amino acids, much of the public has been led to believe
  14. that "predigested" hydrolized protein and manufactured free amino acids are more easily assimilated than
  15. real proteins, and that they are not toxic. Even if free amino acids could be produced industrially without
  16. introducing toxins and allergens, they wouldn't be appropriate for nutritional use.
  17. </p>
  18. <p>
  19. Although some research shows that babies up to the age of 18 months can assimilate free amino acids, a baby
  20. formula containing hydrolyzed protein was associated with decreased serum albumin, which suggests that it
  21. interfered with protein synthesis.
  22. </p>
  23. <p>
  24. The myth that free amino acids are "natural nutritional substances" has been used to promote the use of many
  25. products besides MSG, including aspartame, chelated minerals, and tryptophan.
  26. </p>
  27. <p>
  28. Although several amino acids can be acutely or chronically toxic, even lethal, when too much is eaten,
  29. tryptophan is the only amino acid that is also carcinogenic. (It can also produce a variety of toxic
  30. metabolites, and it is very susceptible to damage by radiation.) Since tryptophan is the precursor of
  31. serotonin, the amount of tryptophan in the diet can have important effects on the way the organism responds
  32. to stress, and the way it develops, adapts, and ages.
  33. </p>
  34. <p>
  35. When an inflammatory disease (eosinophilia-myalgia syndrome) was noticed in people using tryptophan tablets
  36. (1989-90), there was an intense campaign to exonerate the tryptophan itself by blaming the reaction on an
  37. impurity in one company's product. But the syndrome didn't occur only in the people who used that company's
  38. product, and similar changes can be produced by a high-tryptophan diet (Gross, et al., 1999).
  39. </p>
  40. <p>
  41. There are people who advocate the use of tryptophan supplementation or other means to increase serotonin in
  42. the tissues as a treatment for the fibromyalgia syndrome, but the evidence increasingly suggests that
  43. excessive serotonin, interfering with muscle mitochondria, is a major factor in the development of that
  44. syndrome.
  45. </p>
  46. <p>
  47. In 1965, Hans Selye showed that the injection of serotonin caused muscular dystrophy. Subsequent studies
  48. suggest that serotonin excess is involved in both muscular and nervous dystrophy or degeneration. (O'Steen,
  49. 1967; Narukami, et al., 1991; Hanna and Peat, 1989.)
  50. </p>
  51. <p>
  52. The fatigue produced by "over-training" is probably produced by a tryptophan and serotonin overload,
  53. resulting from catabolism of muscle proteins and stress-induced increases in serotonin. Muscle catabolism
  54. also releases a large amount of cysteine, and cysteine, methionine, and tryptophan suppress thyroid function
  55. (Carvalho, et al., 2000). Stress also liberates free fatty acids from storage, and these fatty acids
  56. increase the uptake of tryptophan into the brain, increasing the formation of serotonin. Since serotonin
  57. increases ACTH and cortisol secretion, the catabolic state tends to be self-perpetuating. This process is
  58. probably a factor influencing the rate of aging, and contributing to the physiological peculiarities of
  59. aging and depression.
  60. </p>
  61. <p>
  62. Malnutrition, and specifically protein deficiency, produces an inflammatory state that involves extreme
  63. serotonin dominance. Stress or malnutrition prenatally or in infancy leads to extreme serotonin dominance in
  64. adulthood. Other functions of tryptophan are reduced, as more of it is turned into serotonin.
  65. </p>
  66. <p>
  67. Decreasing tryptophan or decreasing serotonin improves learning and alertness, while increased serotonin
  68. impairs learning.
  69. </p>
  70. <p>
  71. Tryptophan is an essential amino acid for reproduction and growth of the young animal. Most research on the
  72. nutritional requirements for amino acids has been done on farm animals, because of the economic incentive to
  73. find the cheapest way to produce the fastest growth. Farmers aren't interested in the nutritional factors
  74. that would produce the longest-lived pigs. Some research has been done on the amino acid requirements of
  75. rats over a significant part of their short lifespans. In rats and farm animals, the amount of tryptophan
  76. required decreases with time as the rate of growth slows.
  77. </p>
  78. <p>
  79. In some ways, rats never really mature, since they keep growing for nearly their whole lifespan. Their
  80. growth stops just a short time before they die, which is usually around the age of two or three years. (At
  81. this age, rats' cells still retain approximately the same high water content seen in the cells of a two
  82. year-old child.) They usually become infertile about half-way through their lifespan. If we try to draw
  83. conclusions about amino acid requirements from the rat studies, I think we would want to extrapolate the
  84. curve for the decreasing need for tryptophan, far beyond the point seen during the rat's short life. And
  85. those "requirements" were determined according to the amounts that produced a maximum rate of growth, using
  86. the index of the pig farmers, as if the rats were being studied for possible use as meat.
  87. </p>
  88. <p>
  89. When rats were fed a diet completely lacking tryptophan for a short period, or a diet containing only one
  90. fourth of the "normal" amount for a more prolonged period, the results were surprising<strong>:</strong>
  91. They kept the ability to reproduce up to the age of 36 months (versus 17 months for the rats on the usual
  92. diet), and both their average longevity and their maximum longevity increased significantly. They looked and
  93. acted like younger rats. (A methionine-poor diet also has dramatic longevity-increasing effects.)
  94. </p>
  95. <p>
  96. On the tryptophan-poor diet, the amount of serotonin in the brain decreased. When brain serotonin decreases,
  97. the level of testosterone in male animals increases. More than 20 years ago, a chemical
  98. (p-chlorophenylalanine) that inhibits serotonin synthesis was found to tremendously increase libido.
  99. </p>
  100. <p>
  101. In old age, the amount of serotonin in the brain increases. This undoubtedly is closely related to the
  102. relative inability to turn off cortisol production that is characteristic of old age (Sapolsky and Donnelly,
  103. 1985). Hypothyroidism increases the formation of serotonin, as does cortisol (Henley, et al., 1997, 1998;
  104. Neckers and Sze, 1976).
  105. </p>
  106. <p>
  107. In white hair, the amount of tryptophan is higher than in hair of any other color. Although serotonin and
  108. tryptophan are very important during rapid growth, their presence in senile tissues is probably closely
  109. associated with the processes of decline. The hair loss that occurs in hypothyroidism, postpartum syndrome,
  110. and with the use of drugs such as St. John's wort (which can also cause the "serotonin syndrome") could be
  111. another effect of excess serotonin.
  112. </p>
  113. <p>
  114. Serotonin stimulates cell division and tends to increase the formation of connective tissue, so its
  115. formation should be closely regulated once full growth is achieved. It contributes to the age- or
  116. stress-related thickening of blood vessels, and other fibrotic processes that impair organ function.
  117. </p>
  118. <p>
  119. The metabolic rate (eating more without gaining extra weight) and ability to regulate body temperature are
  120. increased by early tryptophan deprivation. (Ashley and Curzon, 1981; Segall and Timiras, 1975.) The ability
  121. to oxidize sugar is impaired by serotonin, and several drugs with antiserotonin actions are being used to
  122. treat diabetes and its complications, such as hypertension, obesity, and foot ulcers.
  123. </p>
  124. <p>
  125. An excess of tryptophan early in life, stress, or malnutrition, activates the system for converting
  126. tryptophan into serotonin, and that tendency persists into adulthood, modifying pituitary function, and
  127. increasing the incidence of pituitary and other cancers.
  128. </p>
  129. <p>
  130. Serotonin's contribution to high blood pressure is well established. It activates the adrenal cortex both
  131. directly and through activation of the pituitary. It stimulates the production of both cortisol and
  132. aldosterone. It also activates aldosterone secretion by way of the renin-angiotensin system. Angiotensin is
  133. an important promoter of inflammation, and contributes to the degeneration of blood vessels with aging and
  134. stress.<strong> It can also promote estrogen production.</strong>
  135. </p>
  136. <p>
  137. In the traditional diet, rather than just eating muscle meats, all the animal parts were used. Since
  138. collagen makes up about 50% of the protein in an animal, and is free of tryptophan, this means that people
  139. were getting about half as much tryptophan in proportion to other amino acids when they used foods such as
  140. "head cheese," ox-tails, and chicken feet.
  141. </p>
  142. <p>
  143. While some of the toxic effects of an excess of individual amino acids have been investigated, and some of
  144. the protective or harmful interactions resulting from changing the ratios of the amino acids have been
  145. observed, the fact that there are about 20 amino acids in our normal diet means that there is an enormous
  146. number of possibilities for harmful or beneficial interactions.
  147. </p>
  148. <p>
  149. The optimal quantity of protein in the diet has traditionally been treated as if it were a matter that could
  150. be resolved just by observing the rate of growth when a certain protein is given in certain quantities,
  151. along with "standard amounts" of calories and other nutrients. This kind of research has been useful to
  152. farmers who want to find the cheapest foods that will produce the biggest animals in the shortest time. But
  153. that kind of research climate has spread a degraded concept of nutrition into the culture at large,
  154. influencing medical ideas of nutrition, the attitudes of consumers, and the policies of governmental
  155. regulatory agencies.
  156. </p>
  157. <p>
  158. When synthetic amino acids are used to supplement natural proteins, they are usually chosen according to
  159. irrelevant models of the "ideal protein's" composition, and many toxic contaminants are invariably present
  160. in the synthetic free amino acids.
  161. </p>
  162. <p>
  163. For the present, the important thing is to avoid the use of the least appropriate food products, while
  164. choosing natural foods that have historical, epidemiological, and biochemical justification.
  165. </p>
  166. <p>
  167. Whey has been promoted as a protein supplement, but it contains a slightly higher proportion of tryptophan
  168. than milk does. Cheese (milk with the whey removed) contains less tryptophan. Some people have been
  169. encouraged to eat only the whites of eggs, "to avoid cholesterol," but the egg albumin is rich in
  170. tryptophan.
  171. </p>
  172. <p>
  173. The expensive tender cuts of meat contain excessive amounts of cysteine and tryptophan, but bone broth
  174. (gelatin) and the tougher cuts of meat contain more gelatin, which lacks those amino acids. Many fruits are
  175. deficient in tryptophan, yet have very significant quantities of the other amino acids. They also contain
  176. some of the "carbon skeleton" (keto-acid) equivalents of the essential amino acids, which can be converted
  177. to protein in the body.
  178. </p>
  179. <p>
  180. Serotonin excess produces a broad range of harmful effects<strong>:</strong> Cancer, inflammation, fibrosis,
  181. neurological damage, shock, bronchoconstriction, and hypertension, for example. Increased serotonin impairs
  182. learning, serotonin antagonists improve it.
  183. </p>
  184. <p>
  185. The simplest, nonessential, amino acid, glycine, has been found to protect against carcinogenesis,
  186. inflammation, fibrosis, neurological damage, shock, asthma, and hypertension. Increased glycine improves
  187. learning (Handlemann, et al., 1989; File, et al., 1999), glycine antagonists usually impair it. Its
  188. antitoxic and cytoprotective actions are remarkable. Collagen, besides being free of tryptophan, contains a
  189. large amount of glycine--32% of its amino acid units, 22% of its weight.
  190. </p>
  191. <p>
  192. The varied antiinflammatory and protective effects of glycine can be thought of as an antiserotonin action.
  193. For example, serotonin increases the formation of TNF (tumor necrosis factor, also called cachectin),
  194. glycine inhibits it. In some situations, glycine is known to suppress the formation of serotonin.<strong>
  195. Antagonists of serotonin can potentiate glycine's effects</strong> (Chesnoy-Marchais, et al., 2000).
  196. People who ate traditional diets, besides getting a lower concentration of tryptophan, were getting a large
  197. amount of glycine in their gelatin-rich diet.
  198. </p>
  199. <p>
  200. Gelatin, besides being a good source of glycine, also contains a large amount of proline, which has some
  201. antiexcitatory properties similar to glycine.
  202. </p>
  203. <p>
  204. If a half-pound of steak is eaten, it would probably be reasonable to have about 20 grams of gelatin at
  205. approximately the same time. Even a higher ratio of gelatin to muscle meat might be preferable.
  206. </p>
  207. <p>
  208. Carbon dioxide, high altitude, thyroid, progesterone, caffeine, aspirin, and decreased tryptophan
  209. consumption protect against excessive serotonin release. When sodium intake is restricted, there is a sharp
  210. increase in serotonin secretion. This accounts for some of the antiinflammatory and diuretic effects of
  211. increased sodium consumption--increasing sodium lowers both serotonin and adrenalin.
  212. </p>
  213. <p>
  214. The polyunsaturated oils interact closely with serotonin and tryptophan, and the short and medium chain
  215. saturated fatty acids have antihistamine and antiserotonin actions. Serotonin liberates free fatty acids
  216. from the tissues, especially the polyunsaturated fats, and these in turn liberate serotonin from cells such
  217. as the platelets, and liberate tryptophan from serum albumin, increasing its uptake and the formation of
  218. serotonin in the brain. Saturated fats don't liberate serotonin, and some of them, such as capric acid found
  219. in coconut oil, relax blood vessels, while linoleic acid constricts blood vessels and promotes hypertension.
  220. Stress, exercise, and darkness, increase the release of free fatty acids, and so promote the liberation of
  221. tryptophan and formation of serotonin. Increased serum linoleic acid is specifically associated with
  222. serotonin-dependent disorders such as migraine.
  223. </p>
  224. <p>
  225. Coconut oil, because of its saturated fatty acids of varied chain length, and its low linoleic acid content,
  226. should be considered as part of a protective diet.
  227. </p>
  228. <p>
  229. In the collagen theory of aging, it is argued that changes in the extracellular matrix are responsible for
  230. isolating cells from their environment, reducing the availability of nutrients and oxygen, and reducing
  231. their ability to send and receive the chemical signals that are needed for correct adaptive functioning.
  232. </p>
  233. <p>
  234. In diabetes, basement membranes are thickened, and in a given volume of tissue there are fewer capillaries.
  235. This effect probably involves excessive serotonin<em> </em>
  236. (Kasho, et al., 1998). Old animals contain a higher proportion of collagen. Old tendons (or tendons that
  237. have been exposed to excessive estrogen, which stimulates the formation of collagen) are more rigid, and
  238. behave almost as if they have been partly cooked. In diseases such as carcinoid, in which very large amounts
  239. of serotonin are released systemically, fibrosis is exaggerated, and may be the direct cause of death.
  240. Radiation and oxygen deprivation also lead to increased tissue fibrosis.
  241. </p>
  242. <p>
  243. In specific fibrotic conditions, such as cirrhosis of the liver, it is known that glycine and saturated fats
  244. can reverse the fibrosis. In fibrosis of the heart, thyroid hormone is sometimes able to reverse the
  245. condition.
  246. </p>
  247. <p>
  248. I think these facts imply that excessive tryptophan, estrogen, and polyunsaturated fats contribute
  249. significantly, maybe decisively, to the degenerative changes that occur in aging. Experiments have
  250. separately shown that reducing dietary tryptophan or unsaturated fats can extend the healthy lifespan, and
  251. several antiestrogenic interventions (removal of the pituitary, or supplementing with progesterone) can slow
  252. age-related changes and delay degenerative diseases. Since these factors interact, each tending to promote
  253. the others, and also interact with exogenous toxins, excess iron accumulation, and other stressors, it would
  254. be reasonable to expect greater results when several of the problems are corrected at the same time.
  255. </p>
  256. <p><strong><h3>REFERENCES</h3></strong></p>
  257. <p>
  258. Toxicol Pathol 1998 May-Jun;26(3):395-402. <strong>
  259. Glycine modulates the toxicity of benzyl acetate in F344 rats.</strong> Abdo KM, Wenk ML, Harry GJ,
  260. Mahler J, Goehl TJ, Irwin RD. "These results suggest that the neurodegeneration induced by BA is mediated by
  261. a depletion of the glycine pool and the subsequent excitotoxicity."
  262. </p>
  263. <p>
  264. Res Clin Stud Headache 1978;6:110-6.<strong>
  265. Role of individual free fatty acids in migraine.
  266. </strong>
  267. Anthony M "Total plasma free fatty acids, platelet serotonin content and plasma stearic, palmitic, oleic and
  268. linoleic acids were estimated in 10 migraine patients before, during and after a migraine attack. Total and
  269. individual plasma free fatty acid levels rose and platelet serotonin content fell in most patients. <strong
  270. >The highest rise was observed in linoleic acid, which is known to be a potent liberator of platelet
  271. serotonin in vitro</strong> and is the only precursor of all prostaglandins in the body. It is suggested
  272. that the rise in plasma levels of<strong>
  273. linoleic acid in migraine could be responsible for the platelet serotonin release observed during the
  274. attack."</strong>
  275. </p>
  276. <p>
  277. Clin Exp Neurol 1978;15:190-6.<strong>
  278. Individual free fatty acids and migraine.</strong> Anthony M Total plasma free fatty acids (FFAs),
  279. platelet serotonin content and plasma stearic, palmitic, oleic and linoleic acids were estimated in 10
  280. migrainous patients before, during and after a migraine attack. Total and individual plasma FFA levels rose
  281. and platelet serotonin fell in most patients. Comparison of the pre-headache and headache mean values showed
  282. that of the FFAs linoleic acid rises most during headache. <strong>10 non-migrainous controls had platelet
  283. serotonin content estimated before and after the ingestion of 20g linoleic acid. All showed a
  284. significant fall in platelet serotonin in the post-ingestion period. It is shown that linoleic acid
  285. releases platelet serotonin in vitro, and this study suggests that it has the same action in
  286. vivo.</strong> Further, it is the precursor of all prostaglandins in the body and its marked elevation
  287. during migraine may serve as a source of increased prostaglandin E1 (PGE1) synthesis. It is<strong>
  288. suggested that linoleic acid plays an important role in the biochemical process of the migraine attack,
  289. acting both as a serotonin releasing factor and a source</strong> of PGF1, the vasodilating action of
  290. which can aggravate the clinical symptoms of migraine.
  291. </p>
  292. <p>
  293. J Appl Physiol 1993 Jun;74(6):3006-12. <strong>
  294. Neuroendocrine and substrate responses to altered brain 5-HT activity during prolonged exercise to
  295. fatigue.</strong> Bailey SP, Davis JM, Ahlborn EN. "Pharmacological manipulation of brain serotonergic
  296. [5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT)] activity affects run time to exhaustion in the rat. These effects may be
  297. mediated by neurochemical, hormonal, or substrate mechanisms. Groups of rats were decapitated during rest,
  298. after 1 h of treadmill running (20 m/min, 5% grade), and at exhaustion. Immediately before exercise rats
  299. were injected intraperitoneally with 1 mg/kg of quipazine dimaleate (QD; a 5-HT agonist), 1.5 mg/kg of LY
  300. 53857 (LY; a 5-HT antagonist), or the vehicle (V; 0.9% saline). LY increased and QD decreased time to
  301. exhaustion (approximately 28 and 32%, respectively; P &lt; 0.05)." "Brain 5-HT and 5-hydroxyindole-3-acetic
  302. acid<strong>
  303. concentrations were higher at 1 h of exercise than at rest (P &lt; 0.05), and the latter increased even
  304. further at fatigue in the midbrain and striatum (P &lt;</strong>
  305. 0.05)."
  306. </p>
  307. <p>
  308. Neurochem Int 1993 Sep;23(3):269-83. <strong>
  309. Glutamate, GABA, glycine and taurine modulate serotonin synthesis and release in rostral and caudal
  310. rhombencephalic raphe cells in primary cultures.</strong> Becquet D, Hery M, Francois-Bellan AM, Giraud
  311. P, Deprez P, Faudon M, Fache MP, Hery F.
  312. </p>
  313. <p>
  314. Acta Physiol Scand 2001 Oct;173(2):223-30. <strong>
  315. Exercise-induced changes in brain glucose and serotonin revealed by microdialysis in rat hippocampus:
  316. effect of glucose supplementation.</strong>
  317. Bequet F, Gomez-Merino D, Berthelot M, Guezennec CY.
  318. </p>
  319. <p>
  320. Amino Acids 2001;20(1):25-34. <strong>Amino acids and central fatigue.</strong> Blomstrand E. "There is an
  321. increasing interest in the mechanisms behind central fatigue, particularly in relation to changes in brain
  322. monoamine metabolism and the influence of specific amino acids on fatigue." <strong>"When the 5-HT level was
  323. elevated in this way the performance was impaired in both rats and human subjects, and in accordance
  324. with this a decrease in the 5-HT level caused an improvement in running performance in rats. The
  325. precursor of 5-HT is the amino acid tryptophan and the synthesis of 5-HT in the brain is thought to be
  326. regulated by the blood</strong> supply of free tryptophan in relation to other large neutral amino acids
  327. (including the branched-chain amino acids, BCAA) since these compete with tryptophan for transport into the
  328. brain."
  329. </p>
  330. <p>
  331. J Neurol Sci 1988 Apr;84(2-3):239-46. <strong>
  332. Increased platelet aggregation and release reaction in myotonic dystrophy.</strong>
  333. Bornstein NM, Zahavi M, Korczyn AD, Zahavi J.
  334. </p>
  335. <p>
  336. Curr Med Chem 2001 Sep;8(11):1257-74. <strong>
  337. The inhibitory neural circuitry as target of antiepileptic drugs.</strong>
  338. Bohme I, Luddens H. "Impairments and defects in the inhibitory neurotransmission in the CNS can contribute
  339. to various seizure disorders, i.e., gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) and glycine as the main inhibitory
  340. neurotransmitters in the brain play a crucial role in some forms of epilepsy."
  341. </p>
  342. <p>
  343. Braz J Med Biol Res 2000 Mar;33(3):355-61. <strong>
  344. Thyroid peroxidase activity is inhibited by amino acids.</strong> Carvalho DP, Ferreira AC, Coelho SM,
  345. Moraes JM, Camacho MA, Rosenthal D
  346. </p>
  347. <p>
  348. Q J Exp Psychol B 2000 Aug;53(3):225-38. <strong>
  349. Rapid visual learning in the rat: effects at the 5-HT1a receptor subtype.</strong>
  350. Cassaday HJ, Simpson EL, Gaffan EA. "<strong>The 5-hydroxytryptamine1a (5-HT1a) receptor agonist
  351. 8-hydroxy-2-(di-n-propylamino) tetralin (8-OH-DPAT; 0.15 mg/kg) impaired rats' rapid visual learning on
  352. a computerized maze. This treatment also increased decision time (DT) but the learning impairment was
  353. not necessarily a side-effect of slower responding because, in this task, responses made at long DT are
  354. more accurate than those at short DT.</strong>" "Its reversal with WAY-100635 offers support to the
  355. hypothesis that 5-HT1a receptor antagonists could improve cognitive function, under conditions of
  356. pre-existing impairment due to overactive serotonergic inhibition, as is thought to occur in Alzheimer's
  357. disease."
  358. </p>
  359. <p>
  360. Med Sci Sports Exerc 1997 Jan;29(1):58-62. <strong>
  361. Effects of acute physical exercise on central serotonergic systems.</strong>
  362. "This paper reviews data concerning the effects of acute physical exercise (treadmill running) in trained
  363. rats. Works from the 1980's have established that<strong>
  364. acute running increases brain serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine: 5-HT) synthesis in two ways.
  365. Lipolysis-elicited release of free fatty acids in the blood compartment displaces the binding of the
  366. essential amino acid tryptophan to albumin, thereby increasing the concentration of the so-called "free
  367. tryptophan" portion, and because exercise increases the ratio of circulating free tryptophan to the sum
  368. of the concentrations of the amino acids that compete with tryptophan</strong> for uptake at the
  369. blood-brain barrier level, tryptophan enters markedly in the brain compartment. However, this marked
  370. increase in central tryptophan levels increases only to a low extent brain 5-HT synthesis, as assessed by
  371. the analysis of 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid levels, thereby suggesting that exercise promotes feedback
  372. regulatory mechanisms. Indirect indices of 5-HT functions open the<strong>
  373. possibility that acute exercise-induced increases in 5-HT biosynthesis are associated with (or lead to)
  374. increases in 5-HT release."</strong>
  375. </p>
  376. <p>
  377. Int J Dev Neurosci 1997 Apr;15(2):257-63. <strong>
  378. Postnatal changes of brain monoamine levels in prenatally malnourished and control rats.</strong> Chen
  379. JC, Turiak G, Galler J, Volicer L.
  380. </p>
  381. <p>
  382. Eur J Pharmacol 2000 Aug 25;402(3):205-13.<strong>
  383. Glycinergic potentiation by some 5-HT(3) receptor antagonists: insight into</strong>
  384. <strong>selectivity.</strong> Chesnoy-Marchais D, Levi S, Acher F.
  385. </p>
  386. <p>
  387. Mech Ageing Dev 1986 Oct;36(2):161-71. <strong>
  388. Influence of low tryptophan diet on survival and organ growth in mice.</strong>
  389. De Marte ML, Enesco HE. Greater survival and reduced growth were found to characterize mice on a tryptophan
  390. deficient diet as compared to fully fed control mice. The 50% survival point was reached by the tryptophan
  391. restricted group at 683 days, and by the control group at 616 days. Measurements of body weight, organ
  392. weight, and DNA level were made at 8, 12, 24, 36, 52 and 78 weeks of age. Both whole body weight and organ
  393. weight of liver, kidney, heart and spleen were about 30% lower in the tryptophan restricted group as
  394. compared to the controls, so that the ratio of organ weight to body weight remained at a constant value for
  395. both groups. There was no significant change in cell number as determined by DNA measurements, as a result
  396. of the tryptophan restriction.
  397. </p>
  398. <p>
  399. J Clin Psychopharmacol 1999 Dec;19(6):506-12. <strong>
  400. Beneficial effects of glycine (bioglycin) on memory and attention in young and middle-aged
  401. adults.</strong> File SE, Fluck E, Fernandes C. ."The effects of Bioglycin(Konapharma, Pratteln,
  402. Switzerland), a biologically active form of the amino acid glycine, were . . . studied in healthy students
  403. (mean age, 20.7 years) and middle-aged men (mean age, 58.9 years) with tests that measured attention, memory
  404. and mood, using a double-blind, randomized, crossover design. Compared with the young group, the middle-aged
  405. group had significantly poorer verbal episodic memory, focused, divided, and sustained attention; they also
  406. differed in their subjective responses at the end of testing. Bioglycin significantly improved retrieval
  407. from episodic memory in both the young and the middle-aged groups, but it did not affect focused or divided
  408. attention. However, the middle-aged men significantly benefited from Bioglycin in the sustained-attention
  409. task. The effects of Bioglycin differed from those of other cognitive enhancers in that it was without
  410. stimulant properties or significant effects on mood, and it primarily improved memory rather than attention.
  411. It is likely to be of benefit in young or older people in situations where high retrieval of information is
  412. needed or when performance is impaired by jet lag, shift work, or disrupted sleep. It may also benefit the
  413. impaired retrieval shown in patients with schizophrenia, Parkinson's disease, and Huntington's disease.
  414. </p>
  415. <p>
  416. Brain Res 1997 Sep 12;768(1-2):43-8.<strong>
  417. Mobilization of arachidonate and docosahexaenoate by stimulation of the 5-HT2A receptor in rat C6 glioma
  418. cells.</strong> Garcia MC, Kim HY Laboratory of Membrane Biochemistry and Biophysics, National Institute
  419. on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, National Institutes of Health, Rockville, MD 20852, USA.<strong>
  420. "In this study, we demonstrate that astroglial 5-HT2A receptors are linked to the mobilization of
  421. polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA). Stimulation of C6 glioma</strong> cells, prelabeled with
  422. [3H]arachidonate (AA, 20:4n6) and [14C]docosahexaenoate (DHA, 22:6n3), with serotonin and the 5-HT(2A/2C)
  423. receptor agonist (+/-)-2,5-dimethoxy-4-iodoamphetamine hydrochloride (DOI) resulted in the mobilization of
  424. both [3H] and [14C] into the supernatant of the cell monolayers. The increased radioactivity in the
  425. supernatant was mainly associated with free fatty acids." "These results indicate that the 5-HT2A receptor
  426. is coupled to the mobilization of PUFA."
  427. </p>
  428. <p>
  429. Neurosci Lett 1995 May 5;190(2):143-5.<strong>
  430. Serotonin involvement in the spontaneous alternation ability: a behavioral study in
  431. tryptophan-restricted rats.</strong> Gonzalez-Burgos I, Olvera-Cortes E, Del Angel-Meza AR,
  432. Feria-Velasco A. Laboratorio de Psicobiologia, Centro de Investigacion Biomedica de Occidente, IMSS,
  433. Guadalajara, Jal., Mexico. Spontaneous alternation (SA) is controlled by septal cholinergic terminals in the
  434. hippocampus. Serotoninergic terminals end on cholinergic nerve endings in the hippocampus, and their
  435. possible role in SA was investigated in rats fed with a tryptophan-deficient diet, from weaning to 60 days
  436. of age. <strong>A T-maze was used for the test. At the age of 40 days, an increase in SA occurred in the
  437. tryptophan deficient rats,
  438. </strong>
  439. although this effect disappeared by 60 days of age. A modulatory role of serotonin in the psychoneural
  440. control of SA is suggested, and it may be through presynaptic inhibition of hippocampal cholinergic
  441. terminals.
  442. </p>
  443. <p>
  444. Physiol Behav 1998 Jan;63(2):165-9.<strong>
  445. Effect of tryptophan restriction on short-term memory.</strong> Gonzalez-Burgos I, Perez-Vega MI, Del
  446. Angel-Meza<strong> </strong>
  447. AR, Feria-Velasco A. Centro de Investigacion Biomedica de Michoacan, Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social,
  448. Morelia. Several brain regions are involved in the learning process that is integrated from sensorial
  449. inputs. It is thereafter consolidated in short- (STM) or long-term memory. Serotonin is strongly related to
  450. both types of memory, and particularly, to STM, however, its regulatory role is still unclear. In this
  451. study, the effects of tryptophan (TRY) restriction on learning and STM were evaluated. Ten Sprague-Dawley
  452. female rats were fed with a TRY-restricted diet (0.15g/100g) starting from postnatal Day 21. At 21, 40, and
  453. 60 days of age, 5 trials per animal were carried out in a "hard-floor"-Biel maze, after 24 h of water
  454. abstinence. The number of errors per trial were registered before reaching<strong> </strong>
  455. the goal.<strong>
  456. At both 40 and 60 days, experimental rats committed less errors than controls. Likewise, the
  457. TRY-restricted group learned the task from the second trial on, whereas controls did not solve it until
  458. the third trial.
  459. </strong>TRY restriction, and therefore brain serotonin reduction, could impair normal cholinergic activity
  460. in some areas such as the hippocampus and the cerebral cortex, where involvement in learning and memory is
  461. well documented. Morphological and neurochemical plastic events could also be related to the more efficient
  462. performance of the task by the TRY-restricted rats.
  463. </p>
  464. <p>
  465. Am J Physiol 1997 Jul;273(1 Pt 2):R324-30. <strong>
  466. Mechanisms in the pressor effects of hepatic portal venous fatty acid infusion.</strong> Grekin RJ,
  467. Dumont CJ, Vollmer AP, Watts SW, Webb RC Portal venous infusion of oleate solution has pressor effects. We
  468. have examined efferent mechanisms, measured the response to sustained infusion, and determined the effect of
  469. linoleate. Eight conscious animals received concurrent infusions of prazosin or vehicle with portal venous
  470. infusion of oleate. Oleate alone<strong><hr /></strong>
  471. <hr />
  472. <strong><hr /></strong>
  473. </p>
  474. <p>
  475. Adv Exp Med Biol 1999;467:507-16. <strong>
  476. Tryptophan toxicity--time and dose response in rats.</strong> Gross B, Ronen N, Honigman S, Livne E.
  477. "During the past decade L-tryptophan (Trp) ingestion have been associated with a multisystemic syndrome,
  478. known as eosinophilia myalgia syndrome (EMS). Even though an epidemic studies indicated that a contaminant,
  479. 1,1'-ethylidene-bis-L-tryptophan was involved in EMS, <strong>abnormalities in metabolism of Trp have been
  480. reported in other similar clinical syndromes such as carcinoid syndrome, scleroderma or eosinophilic
  481. fasciitis."</strong>
  482. <strong>"Increased amounts of connective tissue</strong>
  483. <strong>and induction of inflammatory cell proliferation were observed in lung, spleen and in gastrocnemia
  484. muscle of rats treated with higher dose of Trp for longer period.</strong> Induction of kynurenine
  485. pathway by injection of p-CPA caused more tissue damage. It is concluded that excessive Trp or elevation of
  486. its metabolites could play a role in amplifying some of pathological features of EMS. This pathological
  487. damage is further augmented by metabolites of the kynurenine pathway."
  488. </p>
  489. <p>
  490. Zh Nevrol Psikhiatr Im S S Korsakova 1999;99(2):12-20. <strong>[Neuroprotective effects of glycine in the
  491. acute period of ischemic stroke.]</strong> [Article in Russian] Gusev EI, Skvortsova VI, Komissarova IA,
  492. Dambinova SA, Raevskii KS, Alekseev AA, Bashkatova VG, Kovalenko AV, Kudrin VS, Iakovleva EV.
  493. </p>
  494. <p>
  495. Pharmacol Biochem Behav 1989 Dec;34(4):823-8. <strong>
  496. Milacemide, a glycine prodrug, enhances performance of learning tasks in normal and amnestic
  497. rodents.</strong> Handelmann GE, Nevins ME, Mueller LL, Arnolde SM, Cordi AA. "Increasing glycine
  498. concentrations in the brain by administration of a glycine prodrug, milacemide, is shown here to enhance
  499. performance of a shock-motivated passive avoidance task in rats, and to reverse drug-induced amnesia in a
  500. spontaneous alternation paradigm in mice." "These studies indicate a role of glycinergic neurotransmission
  501. in memory processes, and support the therapeutic potential of glycinergic drugs in memory impairment."
  502. </p>
  503. <p>
  504. Pain 1989 Aug;38(2):145-50.<strong>
  505. Ketanserin in reflex sympathetic dystrophy. A double-blind placebo controlled cross-over trial.
  506. </strong>Hanna MH, Peat SJ.
  507. </p>
  508. <p>
  509. Synapse 1997 Sep;27(1):36-44. <strong>Thyroid hormones and the treatment of depression: an examination of
  510. basic hormonal actions in the mature mammalian brain.
  511. </strong>
  512. Henley WN, Koehnle TJ. "The lack of mechanistic insight reflects, in large part,<strong>
  513. a longstanding bias that the mature mammalian central nervous system is not an important target site for
  514. thyroid hormones."</strong>
  515. </p>
  516. <p>
  517. Am J Physiol 1997 Feb;272(2 Pt 2):H894-903. <strong>
  518. Hypothyroid-induced changes in autonomic control have a central serotonergic component.
  519. </strong>Henley WN, Vladic F. Three experiments were conducted in unanesthetized rats made hypothyroid
  520. (Hypo) or maintained as euthyroid controls (Eu) to examine general cardiovascular responsiveness [experiment
  521. I (Exp I)]; responsiveness to a serotonin (5-HT2) agonist, dl-2,5-dimethoxy-4-iodoamphetamine [DOI
  522. intracerebroventricularly; experiment II (Exp II)]; or responsiveness to a 5-HT(1A) agonist
  523. dl-8-hydroxydipropyl-aminotetralin hydrobromide [8-OH-DPAT intracerebroventricularly; experiment III (Exp
  524. III)]. In Exp I, intravenous infusions of phenylephrine and nitroprusside provided little evidence that
  525. findings in Exp II and III were caused by generalized impairment in cardiovascular responsiveness in Hypo.
  526. In Exp II and III, Eu and Hypo were given either intra-arterial atropine or vehicle. Atropine significantly
  527. elevated heart rate (Exp II and III) and mean arterial pressure (Exp II) in Eu only. When compared with Eu,
  528. Hypo had a reduced pressor response (5.2 vs. 20.1%), an attenuated pulse pressure response (19.3 vs. 35.4%),
  529. and a more robust bradycardia (-17.7 vs. -7.0%) in response to DOI. These differences were atropine
  530. sensitive. In Exp III, Hypo had larger decrements in mean arterial pressure (-9.0 vs. -5.1%), heart rate (
  531. -13.9 vs. - 7.7%), and body temperature (-4.5 vs. -2.7%) in response to 8-OH-DPAT in comparison to Eu.
  532. Parasympathetic involvement in the differential responses to 8-OH-DPAT was less clear than with DOI.
  533. Deranged autonomic control in hypothyroidism may be caused, in part, by changes in central serotonergic
  534. activity.
  535. </p>
  536. <p>
  537. Brain Res 1986 Mar;390(2):221-6. <strong>
  538. Brain serotonin synthesis and Na+,K+-ATPase activity are increased postnatally after prenatal
  539. administration of L-tryptophan.</strong> Hernandez-Rodriguez J, Chagoya G. The effect of prenatal
  540. L-tryptophan supplementation on the serotonin (5-HT) synthesis and the activity of Na+,K+-ATPase in the
  541. cerebral cortex was studied during postnatal development, from birth up to day 30. A parallel and<strong>
  542. significant elevation of the serotonin content and the activity of tryptophan-5-hydroxylase was observed
  543. in the brain of infant rats born to mothers treated with L-tryptophan, as related to non-treated
  544. controls. The</strong> activity of Na+,K+-ATPase was also significantly elevated at the different ages
  545. studied throughout the developmental period, as related to controls. These results suggest an important role
  546. of L-tryptophan in the early regulation of the<strong>
  547. serotonin-synthesizing machinery, which lasts postnatally. Elevation of ATPase activity seems to be
  548. associated to the elevation in the activity of the 5-HT system.</strong>
  549. </p>
  550. <p>
  551. Brain Res 1977 Mar 4;123(1):137-45. <strong>
  552. Daily variations of various parameters of serotonin metabolism in the rat brain. II. Circadian
  553. variations in serum and cerebral tryptophan levels: lack of correlation with 5-HT turnover.</strong>
  554. Hery F, Chouvet G, Kan JP, Pujol JF, Glowinski J "Significant circadian variations in 5-HT and 5-HIAA levels
  555. were found in cerebral tissues." "Important significant circadian variations in free and total serum
  556. tryptophan levels were also observed. In both cases, the maximal levels were found during the middle of the
  557. dark phase after the peak of 5-HIAA levels." "The diurnal changes in tryptophan content in cerebral tissues
  558. seemed thus related to those found in serum."
  559. </p>
  560. <p>
  561. Kidney Int 1998 Oct;54(4):1083-92. <strong>
  562. Serotonin enhances the production of type IV collagen by human mesangial cells.</strong> Kasho M, Sakai
  563. M, Sasahara T, Anami Y, Matsumura T, Takemura T, Matsuda H, Kobori S, Shichiri M.
  564. </p>
  565. <p>
  566. Pharmacol Biochem Behav 1977 Sep;7(3):245-52. <strong>
  567. Fatty acid and tryptophan changes on disturbing groups of rats and caging them singly.</strong> Knott
  568. PJ, Hutson PH, Curzon G The effects of disturbing groups of 24 hr fasted rats on plasma unesterified fatty
  569. acid (UFA) and tryptophan concentrations and brain tryptophan concentrations were investigated. Removing
  570. rats from cages rapidly increased plasma UFA and corticosterone and decreased plasma and whole blood
  571. tryptophan of cage mates. The disturbance also appeared to influence biochemical values of rats in other
  572. cages within the same chamber. Effects specific to individual cages were also suggested. In subsequent
  573. experiments 24 fasting rats caged together were rapidly transferred to 24 separate cages and killed at
  574. intervals. Plasma UFA rose to a maximum by 12 min and then fell toward initial values. Plasma total
  575. tryptophan concurrently fell then rose. Its percentage in the free (ultrafilterable) state, and in some
  576. experiments the absolute values of free tryptophan rose then fell. When the latter rise was marked <strong
  577. >then brain tryptophan and the 5-HT metabolite 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid rose.</strong> Tyrosine changes
  578. were negligible. Thus altered brain tryptophan level and 5-HT metabolism may be associated with plasma
  579. tryptophan changes caused by brief environmental disturbance.
  580. </p>
  581. <p>
  582. J Insect Physiol 2000 May 1;46(5):793-801. <strong>
  583. Effect of an amino acid on feeding preferences and learning behavior in the honey bee, Apis
  584. mellifera.</strong> Kim YS, Smith BH. <strong>"Subjects preferred to feed on a sucrose stimulus that
  585. contained glycine, and the highest relative preference was recorded for the highest concentration of
  586. glycine."</strong> "<strong>All concentrations of glycine enhanced the rate and magnitude of a
  587. conditioned response to an odor . . . ."</strong>
  588. </p>
  589. <p>
  590. Eur J Pharmacol 1981 May 22;71(4):495-8. <strong>
  591. Antagonism of L-glycine to seizures induced by L-kynurenine, quinolinic acid and strychnine in
  592. mice.</strong> Lapin IP.
  593. </p>
  594. <p>
  595. Int J Circumpolar Health 1998;57 Suppl 1:386-8. <strong>Seasonal variation of the amino acid, L-tryptophan,
  596. in interior Alaska.</strong> Levine ME, Duffy LK. "The seasonal pattern of L-tryptophan was studied in a
  597. Fairbanks, Alaska, population that was unadapted to the extreme light variations of the North. Previously,
  598. this population was shown to exhibit seasonal behavior effects such as increases in fatigue and sleep
  599. duration, as well as endocrine effects such as increases in melatonin levels and phase shifting." "Prominent
  600. results included finding increased levels in the winter at several different diurnal time points. These
  601. findings support hypotheses which relate underlying physiological adaptations to the North to the increased
  602. incidence of behavioral disorders such as depression and alcoholism."
  603. </p>
  604. <p>
  605. Infect Immun 2001 Sep;69(9):5883-91. <strong>
  606. Dietary glycine prevents peptidoglycan polysaccharide-induced reactive arthritis in the rat: role for
  607. glycine-gated chloride channel.</strong> Li X, Bradford BU, Wheeler MD, Stimpson SA, Pink HM, Brodie TA,
  608. Schwab JH, Thurman RG.
  609. </p>
  610. <p>
  611. J Neurol Sci 1989 Jan;89(1):27-35. <strong>
  612. Polyamine biosynthetic decarboxylases in muscles of rats with different experimental myopathies.</strong
  613. > Lorenzini EC, Colombo B, Ferioli ME, Scalabrino G, Canal N.
  614. </p>
  615. <p>
  616. Int J Dev Neurosci 1996 Aug;14(5):641-8. <strong>
  617. Nutritional recovery does not reverse the activation of brain serotonin synthesis in the ontogenetically
  618. malnourished rat.</strong> Manjarrez GG, Magdaleno VM, Chagoya G, Hernandez J Coordinacion de
  619. Investigacion Biomedica del Centro Medico Nacional, I.M.S.S. Mexico, D.F. In the present work we confirm
  620. that gestational malnutrition effects body and brain composition and results in an activation of the
  621. synthesis of the brain neurotransmitter 5-hydroxytryptamine. These results also demonstrate more activity of
  622. the rate-limiting enzyme tryptophan hydroxylase in the malnourished fetal and postnatal brain. However, the
  623. activity of this enzyme remains increased in the brain of nutritionally recovered animals accompanied by an
  624. increase in the synthesis of 5-hydroxytryptamine. We therefore suggest that, in the nutritionally recovered
  625. animal, the mechanism of activation of this biosynthetic path in the brain may be not dependent on the
  626. increased<strong>
  627. availability of free L-tryptophan observed in malnourished animals, but might be due to a specific
  628. change in the enzyme complex itself. This hypothesis is</strong> supported by the fact that plasma free
  629. and brain L-tryptophan return to normal in the recovered animal.
  630. </p>
  631. <p>
  632. Brain Res 1997 Nov 7;774(1-2):265-8. <strong>
  633. Tryptophan ingestion by gestant mothers alters prolactin and luteinizing hormone release in the adult
  634. male offspring.</strong> Martin L, Rodriguez Diaz M, Santana-Herrera C, Milena A, Santana C.
  635. </p>
  636. <p>
  637. Rev Esp Fisiol 1984 Jun;40(2):213-9.<strong>
  638. [Lipolytic effect of serotonin in vitro].</strong> [Article in Spanish] Martinez-Conde A, Mayor de la
  639. Torre P, Tamarit-Torres J The lipolytic action of serotonin on isolated adipocytes from the adipose tissue
  640. of rats has been studied. The adipocytes were incubated in serotonin 10(-6) M. Changes both in concentration
  641. and composition of the free intra and extracellular fatty acids as well as diacylglycerides through liquid
  642. gas chromatography were evaluated at different intervals. A lower concentration of<strong>
  643. free fatty acids and diacylglycerides is produced during the first minutes of incubation as well as a
  644. subsequent increase in the concentration of both, which becomes greatest after 20-30 minutes. The
  645. composition of both lipidic fractions</strong> (FFA and DAG) into fatty acids at 5, 10, 20 and 30
  646. minutes, is related to the composition of the triacylglycerides (TAG), since during the
  647. esterification<strong>
  648. process a decline in the DAG of linoleic and palmitoleic acid is observed, both acids arranging
  649. themselves preferably in the TAG 2 position. Whereas the inverse process occurs during lipolysis; i.e.
  650. an increase in the proportion of the acids</strong>
  651. in the 2 position. In the FFA fraction, a higher proportion of fatty acids, preferential by arranged in
  652. positions 1 + 3 of the TAG's is observed. Similarly a decrease is observed in the extracellular
  653. concentration of FFA in the presence of serotonin with respect to the controls, a fact which has been
  654. described by other authors. An analysis of the present data leads us to revise the possible<strong>
  655. role of "Cahill's cycle" (simultaneous activation of the DAG-acyl-transferase and the HSL-TAG-lipase) in
  656. the action of serotonin and other hormones.</strong>
  657. </p>
  658. <p>
  659. Nahrung 1991;35(9):961-7. <strong>[The effect of different protein diets on longevity and various
  660. biochemical parameters of aged rats].</strong> Medovar BJa, Petzke KJ, Semesko TG, Albrecht V, Grigorov
  661. JuG Institut fur Gerontologie, AMW, UdSSR, Kiev. In this work 23 month old rats were fed for 200 days with
  662. different protein diets (NT-diet: 19% protein, 72% of animal origin and LP-diet: 8.8% protein exclusively of
  663. vegetable origin). Some metabolic parameters and lifespan (on the base of a 50% death-rate) were determined.
  664. The relations of the liver free amino<strong>
  665. acids glycine + alanine and tyrosine + phenylalanine + branched chain amino acids and the ratio of
  666. phenylalanine/tyrosine were determined to be higher in the LP-group.</strong> Phenylalanine in liver and
  667. urea concentrations in liver and serum were lower in the LP-group. Furthermore the dopamine or serotonin
  668. levels were significantly lower in lateral and medial or lateral regions of the hypothalamus respectively in
  669. LP-diet fed rats. The norepinephrine content was not modified by<strong>
  670. the diets. The median lifespan of 23 month old rats was higher by 24% following LP-treatment. These
  671. results suggest that the protein component (amino acids) of</strong> different diets may modify
  672. metabolic parameters and lifespan of animals by mechanisms in which the central regulation may be involved.
  673. </p>
  674. <p>
  675. J Neurol Sci 1976 May;28(1):41-56. <strong>
  676. Skeletal muscle necrosis following membrane-active drugs plus serotonin.</strong>
  677. Meltzer HY.
  678. </p>
  679. <p>
  680. Brain Res Bull 1977 Sep-Oct;2(5):347-53.<strong>
  681. Effects of developmental protein malnutrition on tryptophan utilization in brain and peripheral
  682. tissues.</strong> Miller M, Leahy JP, McConville F, Morgane PJ, Resnick O.
  683. </p>
  684. <p>
  685. Exp Neurol 1977 Oct;57(1):142-57. <strong>
  686. Tryptophan availability: relation to elevated brain serotonin in developmentally protein-malnourished
  687. rats.</strong> Miller M, Leahy JP, Stern WC, Morgane PJ, Resnick O.
  688. </p>
  689. <p>
  690. Synapse 1990;6(4):338-43. <strong>Age-related changes of strychnine-insensitive glycine receptors in rat
  691. brain as studied by in vitro autoradiography</strong>. Miyoshi R, Kito S, Doudou N, Nomoto T.
  692. "3H-glycine binding sites were most concentrated in the hippocampus, cerebral cortex, and olfactory
  693. tubercle, and moderate densities of binding sites were located in the striatum, nucleus accumbens, amygdala,
  694. and certain thalamic nuclei." <strong>"In aged animals, severe decline of 3H-glycine binding sites was
  695. observed in the telencephalic regions including the hippocampus and cerebral cortex." "These results
  696. suggest that the decrease of glycine receptors in particular brain regions has some relation with
  697. changes of neuronal functions associated with aging process in these areas.</strong>"
  698. </p>
  699. <p>
  700. Enzyme 1976;21(6):481-7. <strong>Inhibition of actomyosin ATPase by high concentrations of
  701. 5-hydroxytryptamine. Possible basis of lesion in 5HT-induced experimental myopathy.</strong> Mothersill
  702. C, Heffron JJ, McLoughlin JV.
  703. </p>
  704. <p>
  705. Brain Res 1975 Jul 25;93(1):123-32. <strong>
  706. Regulation of 5-hydroxytryptamine metabolism in mouse brain by adrenal glucocorticoids.</strong> Neckers
  707. L, Sze PY "A single injection of<strong>
  708. hydrocortisone acetate (HCA; 20 mg/kg, i.p.) accelerated the accumulation of 5-HT in whole brain after
  709. inhibition of monoamine oxidase activity by paragyline. The hormone did not appear to change brain
  710. tryptophan hydroxylase or 5-hydroxytryptophan decarboxylase activity. However, tryptophan levels in
  711. brain were elevated by 50% within 1 h after treatment with HCA."</strong>
  712. </p>
  713. <p>
  714. Proc Soc Exp Biol Med 1967 Nov;126(2):579-83. <strong>
  715. Serotonin antagonist increases longevity in mice with hereditary muscular dystrophy.</strong> O'Steen
  716. WK.
  717. </p>
  718. <p>
  719. Mech Ageing Dev 1988 Apr;43(1):79-98. <strong>
  720. Histology and survival in age-delayed low-tryptophan-fed rats. Ooka H, Segall PE, Timiras PS.</strong>
  721. Diets containing tryptophan in concentrations 30 and 40 percent of those fed to controls from weaning to
  722. 24-30 months or more, can delay aging in Long-Evans female rats. Mortality among low-tryptophan-fed rats was
  723. greater in the juvenile period, but substantially less than controls at late ages. Histological biomarkers
  724. of aging were also delayed after tryptophan restriction in some organs (liver, heart, uterus, ovary, adrenal
  725. and spleen) but not in others (kidney, lung, aorta). Brain serotonin levels were low in tryptophan-deficient
  726. rats but showed remarkable capacity for rehabilitation. Effects on early and late mortality and brain levels
  727. of serotonin were proportional to the severity of the restriction.
  728. </p>
  729. <p>
  730. Age Ageing 1985 Mar;14(2):71-5. <strong>
  731. Plasma tryptophan, age and depression.</strong> Phipps DA, Powell C. Plasma, obtained from 131
  732. nondepressed, otherwise healthy subjects aged from 17 to 102 years, and 22 depressed subjects aged over 70
  733. years, was analysed for total and free tryptophan. Variation with age was found in total tryptophan.<strong>
  734. This association has not been described hitherto. There was a significant increase in total tryptophan
  735. and a non-significant increase in free tryptophan with depression. This is in contrast to some studies
  736. in younger people showing a decline in plasma tryptophan in depressed subjects.</strong>
  737. </p>
  738. <p>
  739. Bratisl Lek Listy 1975 Jul;64(1):58-63. <strong>
  740. [The effect of serotonin on the release of free fatty acids from human and rat adipose tissue (author's
  741. transl)].</strong> [Article in Czech] Rath R, Kujalova V.
  742. </p>
  743. <p>
  744. Adv Exp Med Biol 1999;467:497-505. <strong>
  745. Oxidative damage in rat tissue following excessive L-tryptophan and atherogenic diets.</strong> Ronen N,
  746. Livne E, Gross B.
  747. </p>
  748. <p>
  749. FASEB J 1994 Dec;8(15):1302-7.<strong>
  750. Methionine restriction increases blood glutathione and longevity in F344 rats.</strong>
  751. Richie JP Jr, Leutzinger Y, Parthasarathy S, Malloy V, Orentreich N, Zimmerman JA "Met restriction resulted
  752. in a 42% increase in mean and 44% increase in maximum life span, and in 43% lower body weight compared to
  753. controls (P &lt; 0.001). Increases in blood GSH levels of 81% and 164% were observed in mature and old
  754. Met-restricted animals, respectively (P &lt; 0.001)."
  755. </p>
  756. <p>
  757. Carcinogenesis 1999 Nov;20(11):2075-81. <strong>
  758. Dietary glycine prevents the development of liver tumors caused by the peroxisome proliferator
  759. WY-14,643.</strong> Rose ML, Cattley RC, Dunn C, Wong V, Li X, Thurman RG.
  760. </p>
  761. <p>
  762. Mech Ageing Dev 1983 Nov-Dec; 23(3-4):245-52. <strong>
  763. Low tryptophan diets delay reproductive aging.</strong> Segall PE, Timiras PS, Walton JR. Newly weaned
  764. female rats fed diets severely deficient in the essential amino acid tryptophan show marked delays in
  765. reproductive aging, with conception and delivery occurring as late as 36 months. The rate of aging in these
  766. rats seems inversely related to both their early growth rates and the accessibility of brain tryptophan. The
  767. subsequent age retardation may depend on a reduction in both early cell loss and rate of brain maturation.
  768. </p>
  769. <p>
  770. Mech Ageing Dev 1978 Jan;7(1):1-17. <strong>
  771. Neural and endocrine development after chronic tryptophan deficiency in rats: I. Brain monoamine and
  772. pituitary responses.</strong> Segall PE, Ooka H, Rose K, Timiras PS. "Caloric restriction and tryptophan
  773. deficient diets have been shown to delay aging in the immature laboratory rat." "Another group of animals,
  774. in which growth and maturation was delayed by feeding d,1-parachlorophenylalanine (PCPA) showed decreases in
  775. serotonin, norepinephrine and dopamine concentrations in all brain regions investigated. All treatments
  776. employed to arrest growth and maturation resulted in pituitary alterations manifested by gross, histological
  777. and ultrastructural changes. It is postulated that there maturation- and age-retarding treatments delay the
  778. development of the central nervous system resulting in postponed maturation of the neuroendocrine axis, with
  779. consequent hypoactivity of certain pituitary functions and a resultant delay in the onset of maturation and
  780. senescence."
  781. </p>
  782. <p>
  783. Aktuelle Gerontol 1977 Oct;7(10):535-8.<strong>
  784. Long-term tryptophan restriction and aging in the rat.</strong> Segall P. Growth-retarded rats fed a
  785. tryptophan deficient diet at 21 days for periods of<strong>
  786. 6-22 months were shown to reach normal body weight when subsequently fed Purina Rat Chow. They
  787. demonstrated an increased ability over similar aged controls to recover from hypothermia induced by
  788. 3-minute whole-body ice water immersion,</strong> were able to bear litters at 17--28 months of age,
  789. showed a delay in the age of onset of visible tumors, and indicated an increase in their average lifespan
  790. at<strong>
  791. late ages. Animals fed on this diet from 3 months of age revealed a similar ability to reproduce at
  792. advanced ages, but not as marked as those placed on the diet earlier. The average lifespan (in months
  793. +/- the standard error of the mean) of the rats recovering from the long-term tryptophan-deficient diets
  794. was 36.31 +/- 2.26 while the control rats survived an average of 30.5 +/- 1.90</strong> months. The last
  795. of 8 rats surviving the period of tryptophan-deficiency died at<strong>
  796. 45.50 months (1387 days) while the last of 14 control rats died at 41.75 months (1266 days). It is
  797. hypothesized that some kind of subtle mechanism exerts its</strong> influence on the rats during the
  798. period of tryptophan deficiency which caused an accelerated morbidity and mortality as they approached
  799. senescence approximately<strong>
  800. 1 to 2 years after refeeding.
  801. </strong>This is parallel to the situation with immature<strong>
  802. animals subjected to long-term caloric restriction and then fed on normal diets.</strong>
  803. </p>
  804. <p>
  805. Mech Ageing Dev 1976 Mar-Apr;5(2):109-24. <strong>
  806. Patho-physiologic findings after chronic tryptophan deficiency in rats: a model for delayed growth and
  807. aging.</strong> Segall PE, Timiras PS. Long-Evans female rats three weeks, three months and 13-14 months
  808. of age were placed on tryptophan-deficient diets for periods ranging from a few months to nearly two years.
  809. Growth was interupted during the period of tryptophan-deficiency, but when the animals were returned to a
  810. complete diet, they gained weight and grew to normal size. Ability to reproduce, as indicated<strong>
  811. by litter production, was present at 17-28 months of age in rats which had been deprived of tryptophan,
  812. whereas no controls over 17 months of age produced any offspring. Other signs of delayed aging in the
  813. experimental group included, at advanced ages, greater longevity, as well as later onset in the
  814. appearance of obvious tumors, and better coat condition and hair regrowth. Many of these effects were
  815. also seen in pair-fed controls (fed a diet equal in amount to that</strong> eaten by the
  816. tryptophan-deprived rats, but with 1-tryptophan added). It is hypothesized that tryptophan deficiency delays
  817. growth, development and maturation of the central nervous system (CNS), in particular, by decreasing the
  818. levels of the neurotransmitter serotonin, for which tryptophan is the necessary precursor. In a parallel
  819. experiment, chronic treatment with d, 1-parachlorophenylalanine, an inhibitor of brain serotonin synthesis,
  820. from weaning until adulthood, also inhibited growth (body weight) and delayed sexual maturation (age of
  821. vaginal opening). These observations suggest that diets deficient in tryptophan or restricted in calories
  822. can affect maturation and aging by interfering with CNS protein synthesis, or neurotransmitter metabolism,
  823. or both.
  824. </p>
  825. <p>
  826. Naturwissenschaften 1965 Sep;52(18):519. <strong>
  827. [Serotonin-caused muscular dystrophy].</strong> [Article in German] Selye H.
  828. </p>
  829. <p>
  830. Toxicology 1999 Feb 15;132(2-3):139-46. <strong>
  831. Protection against chronic cadmium toxicity by glycine.</strong> Shaikh ZA, Tang W
  832. </p>
  833. <p>
  834. Biosci Biotechnol Biochem 1998 Mar;62(3):580-3. <strong>
  835. Increased conversion ratio of tryptophan to niacin in severe food restriction.</strong>
  836. Shibata K, Kondo T, Miki A.
  837. </p>
  838. <p>
  839. Monogr Neural Sci 1976;3:94-101.<strong>
  840. Sex, migraine and serotonin interrelationships.</strong> Sicuteri F, Del Bene E, Fonda C. "Sexual
  841. deficiency or frank impotence in man could be due to an imbalance of monoamines, particularly 5-HT, at the
  842. mating center level. An absolute or<strong>
  843. relative excess of 5-HT seems to antagonize testosterone at the level of the mating center receptors in
  844. the brain. Plasma testosterone levels in so-called psychological impotence are normal. When the 5-HT
  845. concentration in sexually deficient men is sufficiently decreased with parachlorophenylalanine
  846. (PCPA)</strong> treatment and testosterone levels increased following its administration, a vivid sexual
  847. stimulation appears in about half of the untractable cases." "Yet the PCPA-MAOI treatment avoids the
  848. prostate carcinogenic risk of testosterone administration in aging males, and seems to have euphorizing
  849. effects stronger than those expected only from MAOI therapy. Because of the several side effects of
  850. PCPA-MAOI testosterone, the present experiments should be interpreted very cautiously."
  851. </p>
  852. <p>
  853. Hepatology 1999 Mar;29(3):737-45.<strong>
  854. Glycine and uridine prevent D-galactosamine hepatotoxicity in the rat: role of Kupffer cells.</strong>
  855. Stachlewitz RF, Seabra V, Bradford B, Bradham CA, Rusyn I, Germolec D, Thurman RG.
  856. </p>
  857. <p>
  858. Eur J Appl Physiol Occup Physiol 1999 Mar;79(4):318-24. <strong>Effect of acute and chronic exercise on
  859. plasma amino acids and prolactin concentrations and on [3H]ketanserin binding to serotonin2A receptors
  860. on human platelets.</strong> Struder HK, Hollmann W, Platen P, Wostmann R, Weicker H, Molderings
  861. GJ.<strong>
  862. "The neurotransmitter serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine, 5-HT) has been shown to modulate various
  863. physiological and psychological functions such as fatigue.</strong> Altered regulation of the
  864. serotonergic system has been suggested to play a role in response to exercise stress." "The present results
  865. support the hypothesis that acute endurance exercise may increase 5-HT availability.<strong>
  866. This was reflected in the periphery by increased concentration of the 5-HT precursor free TRP, by
  867. increased plasma PRL concentration, and by a reduction of</strong> 5-HT2A receptors on platelets."
  868. </p>
  869. <p>
  870. Epilepsy Res 1999 Jan;33(1):11-21.<strong>
  871. Pharmacokinetic analysis and anticonvulsant activity of glycine and glycinamide derivatives.</strong>
  872. Sussan S, Dagan A, Bialer M.
  873. </p>
  874. <p>
  875. Adv Biochem Psychopharmacol 1976; 15:251-65. <strong>
  876. Glucocorticoid regulation of the serotonergic system of the brain.</strong>
  877. Sze PY. "Glucorticoids at concentrations above 10(-7) M stimulate the uptake of tryptophan by brain
  878. synaptosomes."
  879. </p>
  880. <p>
  881. Neurobiol Aging 1984 Fall;5(3):235-42. <strong>
  882. Lifetime brain serotonin: regional effects of age and precursor availability.</strong>
  883. Timiras PS, Hudson DB, Segall PE.<strong>
  884. "In the rat, regional brain serotonin levels which do not change from 2-30 months of age are increased
  885. at 36 months."
  886. </strong>"Impaired brain serotonin levels recover moderately but remain lower than controls as late as 36
  887. months, growth is never completely compensated, and norepinephrine levels show a rebound increase."
  888. </p>
  889. <p>
  890. Kidney Int 1996 Feb;49(2):449-60. <strong>
  891. Cytoprotection of kidney epithelial cells by compounds that target amino acid gated chloride
  892. channels.</strong> Venkatachalam MA, Weinberg JM, Patel Y, Saikumar P, Dong Z
  893. </p>
  894. <p>
  895. Am J Physiol Lung Cell Mol Physiol 2000 Aug;279(2):L390-8<strong>. Dietary glycine blunts lung inflammatory
  896. cell influx following acute endotoxin.</strong> Wheeler MD, Rose ML, Yamashima S, Enomoto N, Seabra V,
  897. Madren J, Thurman RG.
  898. </p>
  899. <p>
  900. Am J Physiol 1999 Nov;277(5 Pt 1):L952-9.<strong>
  901. Production of superoxide and TNF-alpha from alveolar macrophages is blunted by glycine.</strong> Wheeler
  902. MD, Thurman RG.
  903. </p>
  904. <p>
  905. Stroke 1991 Apr;22(4):469-76. <strong>Identification of capric acid as a potent vasorelaxant of human
  906. basilar arteries.</strong>
  907. White RP, Ricca GF, el-Bauomy AM, Robertson JT<strong>
  908. "To determine whether naturally occurring fatty acids, especially saturated ones, might act directly as
  909. vasodilators, segments of human basilar arteries and umbilical arteries were precontracted submaximally
  910. with prostaglandin F2 alpha and then exposed to different saturated fatty acids (C4 through C16)
  911. or</strong>
  912. <hr />
  913. <strong>Caprate also inhibited contractions elicited by KCl, serotonin, and the thromboxane analogue
  914. U46619.</strong>"
  915. </p>
  916. <p>
  917. Neurochem Res 1978 Jun;3(3):295-311. <strong>
  918. Adaptive changes induced by high altitude in the development of brain monoamine enzymes.</strong>
  919. Vaccari A, Brotman S, Cimino J, Timiras PS.
  920. </p>
  921. <p>
  922. Growth Dev Aging 1991 Winter; 55(4):275-83. <strong>
  923. Effect of aging and diet restriction on monoamines and amino acids in cerebral cortex of Fischer-344
  924. rats.</strong> Yeung JM, Friedman E.
  925. </p>
  926. <p>
  927. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 1992 Jul 15;89(14):6443-6. <strong>
  928. Platelet activation by simultaneous actions of diacylglycerol and unsaturated fatty acids.</strong>
  929. Yoshida K, Asaoka Y, Nishizuka Y "Several cis-unsaturated fatty acids such as oleic, linoleic, linolenic,
  930. eicosapentaenoic, and docosahexaenoic acids added directly to intact human platelets greatly enhance protein
  931. kinase C activation as judged by the phosphorylation of its specific endogenous substrate, a 47-kDa
  932. protein." "I<strong>n the presence of ionomycin and either 1,2-dioctanoylglycerol or phorbol 12-myristate
  933. 13-acetate, the release of serotonin from the platelets is also remarkably increased by cis-unsaturated
  934. fatty acids. The effect of these fatty acids is observed at concentrations less than 50 microM.
  935. Saturated fatty acids and trans-unsaturated fatty acids are inactive."</strong>
  936. ". . . cis-unsaturated fatty acids increase an apparent sensitivity of the platelet response to Ca2+. The
  937. results suggest that cis-unsaturated fatty acids, which are presumably produced from phosphatidylcholine by
  938. signal-dependent activation of phospholipase A2, may take part directly in cell signaling through the
  939. protein kinase C pathway."
  940. </p>
  941. <p>
  942. Jpn J Physiol 1969 Apr 15;19(2):176-86. <strong>
  943. Lipolytic action of serotonin in brown adipose tissue in vitro.</strong>
  944. Yoshimura K, Hiroshige T, Itoh S
  945. </p>
  946. <p>
  947. Hepatology 2000 Sep;32(3):542-6. <strong>
  948. Glycine prevents apoptosis of rat sinusoidal endothelial cells caused by deprivation of vascular
  949. endothelial growth factor.</strong> Zhang Y, Ikejima K, Honda H, Kitamura T, Takei Y, Sato N
  950. </p>
  951. <p>
  952. Mol Pharmacol 1999 Sep;56(3):455-63. <strong>
  953. Dietary glycine and renal denervation prevents cyclosporin A-induced hydroxyl radical production in rat
  954. kidney.</strong> Zhong Z, Connor HD, Yin M, Moss N, Mason RP, Bunzendahl H, Forman DT, Thurman RG
  955. </p>
  956. <p>
  957. " Ray Peat 2006. All Rights Reserved.
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