Y. Tozawa et al., STRESS-INDUCED INCREASE IN URINARY ISATIN EXCRETION IN RATS - REVERSAL BY BOTH DEXAMETHASONE AND ALPHA-METHYL-P-TYROSINE, Biochemical pharmacology, 56(8), 1998, pp. 1041-1046
The effects of acute food deprivation and acute cold exposure on 24-hr
urinary isatin excretion in rats and a mechanism responsible for chan
ges in urinary isatin excretion during stress were investigated. This
is the first study to demonstrate by HPLC that urinary isatin excretio
n is increased by stress. Both types of stress induced a marked increa
se in urinary isatin excretion during the 24 hr following the initiati
on of stress. Dexamethasone administration prevented the increase in u
rinary isatin excretion induced by both of the different types of stre
ss. Furthermore, administration of either the benzodiazepine receptor
agonist diazepam or the tyrosine hydroxylase inhibitor alpha-methyl-p-
tyrosine prevented the increase in urinary isatin excretion induced by
acute food deprivation, whereas the dopamine-beta-hydroxylase inhibit
or diethyldithiocarbamate proved ineffective. These observations sugge
st that during stress, activated catecholamine synthesizing cells and
corticotropin-releasing factor cells, both of which play central roles
in stress responses, may be involved in total isatin production. Isat
in may serve as an endogenously generated marker for some types of str
ess. (C) 1998 Elsevier Science Inc.