AI Article Synopsis

  • beta-Phenylethylamine (beta-PEA) is a brain-produced neuromodulator linked to neurological issues like depression and ADHD, impacting neuron function at low concentrations but causing convulsions at high doses.
  • The study used a patch-clamp technique to analyze how beta-PEA affects ionic currents in rat brain cells, finding it suppresses K(+) currents critical for regulating neuron activity.
  • This suppression decreases M-current and leakage K(+) current, leading to increased neuronal excitability and potentially explaining the convulsions seen with high-dose beta-PEA.

Article Abstract

beta-Phenylethylamine (beta-PEA), an endogenous amine synthesized in the brain, serves as a neuromodulator and is involved in the pathophysiology of various neurological disorders such as depression, schizophrenia, and attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder. beta-PEA fully exerts the physiological effects within the nanomolar concentration range via the trace amine receptors, but beta-PEA also causes convulsions at much higher concentrations via an as yet unknown mechanism. To investigate the electrophysiological mechanism by which beta-PEA induces convulsions, we examined the effect of beta-PEA on ionic currents passing through the cell membrane of dissociated rat cerebral cortical neurons, using a patch-clamp technique. The external application of beta-PEA suppressed ionic currents which continuously flowed when the membrane potential was held at -25 mV. The suppression was in a concentration-dependent manner and a half-maximal effective concentration was 540 muM. These currents suppressed by beta-PEA consisted of two K(+) currents: a time- and voltage-dependent K(+) current (M-current) and a leakage K(+) current. The suppression of the M-current reduces the efficacy of the current in limiting excessive neuronal firing, and the suppression of the leakage K(+) current can cause membrane depolarization and thus promote neuronal excitation. Reducing both of these currents in concert may produce neuronal seizing activity, which could conceivably underlie the convulsions induced by high-dose beta-PEA.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1620/tjem.215.333DOI Listing

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