Abstract

We previously observed that administration of tyrosine to rats or humans elevated urinary dopamine, norepinephrine and epinephrine levels. The present studies examine the effects on these urinary catecholamines of varying the ratio of protein to carbohydrate in the diets. Rats consumed diets containing 0, 18 or 40% protein (76, 58 and 36% carbohydrate respectively) for 8 days. The stress of consuming the protein-free food was associated with a 16% weight reduction, and with significantly lower serum, heart and brain tyrosine levels than those noted in rats eating the 18 or 40% protein diets. Absence of protein from the diet also decreased urinary levels of dopamine and DOPA but increased urinary norepinephrine and epinephrine, probably by increasing sympathoadrenal discharge; it also increased the excretion of DOPA in animals pretreated with carbidopa, a DOPA decarboxylase inhibitor. Carbidopa administration decreased urinary dopamine, norepinephrine and epinephrine as expected; however, among carbidopa-treated rats urinary norepinephrine and epinephrine concentrations were highest for animals consuming the protein-free diet, again suggesting enhanced release of stored catecholamines from sympathoadrenal cells. The changes in urinary catecholamines observed in animals eating the protein-free diet were similar to those seen in rats fasted for 5 days: dopamine levels fell sharply while norepinephrine and epinephrine increased. These data indicate that the effects of varying dietary protein and carbohydrate contents on dopamine secretion from peripheral structures differ from its effects on structures secreting the other two catecholamines. Protein consumption increases dopamine synthesis and release probably by making more of its precursor, tyrosine, available to peripheral dopamine-producing cells; it decreases urinary norepinephrine and epinephrine compared with that seen in protein-deprived animals, probably by diminishing the firing of sympathetic neurons and adrenal chromaffin cells.

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