Lack of Effect of Sodium Benzoate at Reported Clinical
Therapeutic Concentration on d‑Alanine Metabolism
in Dogs
Posted on 2018-06-12 - 00:00
Cognitive decline
and psychosis have been hypothesized to be mediated
by N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor (NMDAR)
hypofunction. Consistent with this hypothesis, chronic treatment with d-alanine, a coagonist at the glycine site of the NMDAR, leads
to an improvement of positive and cognitive symptoms in schizophrenic
patients. d-alanine is oxidized by d-amino acid
oxidase (DAAO); thus, an inhibitor of DAAO would be expected to enhance d-alanine levels and likewise lead to desirable clinical outcomes.
Sodium benzoate, on the basis of d-amino acid inhibition,
was observed to display beneficial clinical effects in schizophrenic
and Alzheimer’s patients. However, in the clinical pilot studies
using sodium benzoate, d-amino acids were not quantified
to verify that sodium benzoate’s efficacy was mediated through
DAAO inhibition. In this study, d-alanine content was monitored
in cerebral spinal fluid (CSF) of dogs treated with daily injections
of d-alanine (30 mg/kg) alone and in combination with sodium
benzoate (30 mg/kg) for seven consecutive days. We reasoned that the
cerebral spinal fluid d-alanine quantity is reflective of
the brain d-alanine levels and it would increase as a consequence
of DAAO inhibition with sodium benzoate. We found that d-alanine
treatment lead to maximal concentration of 7.51 μM CSF d-alanine level; however, coadministration of sodium benzoate and d-alanine did not change CSF d-alanine level beyond
that of d-alanine treatment alone. As a consequence, we conclude
that clinical efficacy associated with chronic administration of sodium
benzoate in schizophrenic and Alzheimer’s patients is likely
not mediated through inhibition of DAAO.
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Popiolek, Michael; Tierney, Brendan; Steyn, Stefanus J.; DeVivo, Michael (2018). Lack of Effect of Sodium Benzoate at Reported Clinical
Therapeutic Concentration on d‑Alanine Metabolism
in Dogs. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acschemneuro.8b00229