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-----Original Message-----
From: Murray Charters [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
Sent: Tuesday, November 27, 2001 12:11 AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: ARTICLE: Scientists determine the structure of MAO B


Public release date: 25-Nov-2001
Contact: Holly Korschun
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404-727-3990
Emory University Health Sciences Center
Scientists determine the structure of human
Monoamine Oxidase B (MAO B)

Scientists from Emory University School of Medicine and the
University of Pavia, Italy, have determined for the first time the
three-dimensional structure of monoamine oxidase B (MAO B) -
an enzyme  important  in several major disease processes;
particularly age-related neurological disorders.  Understanding the
detailed structure of the enzyme should provide a framework for
designing new  neuroprotective drugs.  The research will be
published in the January 2002 print edition of Nature Structural
Biology and in the online edition on Nov. 26, 2001.

Monoamine oxidases  (MAO B and MAO A)  are well-known targets
for antidepressant drugs and for drugs used to treat neurological
disorders and diseases of aging, such as Parkinson's disease and
Alzheimers disease. MAO A and MAO B are attached to the outer
membrane of the mitochondria - the energy powerhouses of cells
and function to oxidize amine neurotransmitters such as dopamine
and serotonin.

Through their model of the enzyme's structure, the Emory and Pavia
scientists revealed the architecture of the enzyme's active site,
which is responsible for its catalytic properties.  They also described
sites on the enzyme responsible for its binding to the membrane.

Pharmacologists have designed a number of drugs, both reversible
and irreversible, that inhibit MAO B and are used to treat neurological
disorders.  For example, the MAO B inhibitor deprenyl is administered
to increase the effectiveness of L-dopa therapy in the treatment of
Parkinson's disease and to provide neuroprotective effects in  patients
with pre-Parkinson's syndrome. Recent studies have also
demonstrated that MAO B is inhibited by compounds present in
tobacco smoke, which may contribute to the addictive properties of
tobacco use. Scientific and clinical interest in these enzymes has been
ongoing for more that 40 years and has resulted in more than 15,000
papers published on their biological properties.

"Although scientists already have made considerable progress in the
development of MAO B inhibitors to treat neurodegenerative and
psychiatric disorders, we are very optimistic that our new knowledge
about the three-dimensional structure of the enzyme will facilitate
additional improvements in drug design which will lead to increased
specificity and fewer side effects," said Dale Edmondson, Ph.D.,
professor of biochemistry, Emory University School of Medicine,
and co-principal investigator of the project .

Other authors included co-principal investigator Andrea Mattevi,
Department of Genetics and Microbiology, University of Pavia and
postdoctorals Claudia Binda, Paige Newton-Vinson and Frantisek
Hubalek.

MAO B has been shown to be elevated more than three fold in the
brain tissue of elderly individuals.  Recent studies have shown that
elevated levels of MAO B in neurons and kidney cells can lead to
cell death (apoptosis).  Clinical trials currently are underway in
several centers to target increased levels of MAO B that have been
identified in astrocytes (a type of brain cell) in Alzheimer's patients.

"The structural insights will provide us with a new framework to
explore the catalytic mechanism of the enzyme, to understand the
differences between the A and B forms, and to design specific new
inhibitors to treat and prevent age-related disorders,"
Dr. Edmondson said.  "It also will help us understand the role of
these enzymes in the clearance of amine-containing drugs  either in
development or in clinical use for the treatment of other disorders."

"This finding may well result in the development of novel treatments
for depression -  a major public health problem," said Charles
Nemeroff, M.D., Ph.D., Reunette W. Harris professor of psychiatry
and behavioral sciences at Emory University School of Medicine and
chair of the department.  "MAO inhibitors are excellent
antidepressants but have an unfavorable side-effect profile.
This discovery should allow for the synthesis of novel MAO
inhibitors with great selectivity and few side effects."

"The MAO-B structure is a major advance in understanding a
medically important target enzyme.  It will help unravel previously
ill-understood inhibitor structure/activity relationships leading to
improved drugs for mental illness and neurodegenerative diseases,"
said Dr. Peter Preusch, a biochemist at the National Institute of
General Medical Sciences NIGMS of the National Institutes of
Health (NIH).

###

The research was supported by grants from the NIGMS,
the Consiglio Nazionale delle Richerche and Agenzia Spaziale
Italiana.

Dr. Edmondson is available for comment at 404-727-5972.

SOURCE: EurekAlert
http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2001-11/euhs-sdt_1112101.php

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