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REVIEW ARTICLE Hypothesized Deficiency of Guanine-Based Purines May Contribute to Abnormalities of Neurodevelopment, Neuromodulation, and Neurotransmission in Lesch-Nyhan Syndrome Stephen I. Deutsch, MD, PhD,*† Katrice D. Long, BS,* Richard B. Rosse, MD,*† John Mastropaolo, PhD,*† and Judy Eller* Abstract: The Lesch-Nyhan syndrome is a devastating sex-linked recessive disorder resulting from almost complete deficiency of the activity of hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase (HPRT). The enzyme deficiency results in an inability to synthesize the nucleotides guanosine monophosphate and inosine monophosphate from the purine bases guanine and hypoxanthine, respectively, via the ‘‘salvage’’ pathway and an accelerated biosynthesis of these purines via the de novo pathway. The syndrome is characterized by neurologic manifestations, including the very dramatic symptom of compulsive selfmutilation. The neurologic manifestations may result, at least in part, from a mixture of neurodevelopmental (eg, a failure to ‘‘arborize’’dopaminergic synaptic terminals) and neurotransmitter (eg, disruption of GABA and glutamate receptor–mediated neurotransmission) consequences. HPRT deficiency results in elevated extracellular levels of hypoxanthine, which can bind to the benzodiazepine agonist recognition site on the GABAA receptor complex, and the possibility of diminished levels of guanine-based purines in discrete ‘‘pools’’ involved in synaptic transmission. In addition to their critical roles in metabolism, gene replication and expression, and signal transduction, guanine-based purines may be important regulators of the synaptic availability of L-glutamate. Guanine-based purines may also have important trophic functions in the CNS. The investigation of the LeschNyhan syndrome may serve to clarify these and other important neurotransmitter, neuromodulatory, and neurotrophic roles that guaninebased purines play in the central nervous system, especially the developing brain. A widespread and general deficiency of guaninebased purines would lead to impaired transduction of a variety of signals that depend on GTP-protein-coupled second messenger systems. This is less likely in view of a prominent localized pathologic effect of HPRT deficiency on presynaptic dopaminergic projections to the striatum. A possible more circumscribed effect of a deficiency of guanine-based purines could be interference with From the *Mental Health Service Line, VISN5, Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Washington, DC; and †Department of Psychiatry, Georgetown University School of Medicine, Washington, DC. This work was supported by the Department of Veterans Affairs VISN 5 Mental Illness, Research, Education and Clinical Center (MIRECC; Alan S. Bellack, PhD, Director). Reprints: Stephen I. Deutsch, MD, PhD, Director, Mental Health Service Line, VISN5, Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, 50 Irving Street, NW, Washington, DC 20422 (e-mail: [email protected]). Copyright Ó 2005 by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins 28 modulation of glutamatergic neurotransmission. Guanosine has been shown to be an important modulator of glutamatergic neurotransmission, promoting glial reuptake of L-glutamate. A deficiency of guanosine could lead to dysregulated glutamatergic neurotransmission, including possible excitotoxic damage. Unfortunately, although the biochemical lesion has been known for quite some time (ie, HPRT deficiency), therapeutically beneficial interventions for these affected children and adults have not yet emerged based on this elucidation. Conceivably, guanosine or its analogues and excitatory amino acid receptor antagonists could participate in the pharmacotherapy of this devastating disorder. Key Words: Lesch-Nyhan syndrome, hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase, guanosine, hypoxanthine, GABA, glutamate (Clin Neuropharmacol 2005;28:28–37) LESCH-NYHAN SYNDROME Disrupted Purine Metabolism In addition to their essential roles in metabolism, mitochondrial electron transport, and gene replication and expression, nucleosides and nucleotides, particularly those with purine bases (eg, adenosine, inosine, and guanosine), are important modulators of neurotransmission, regulating the synaptic availability of neurotransmitters, participating in second messenger cascades, and acting as direct agonists of cell surface receptors, among other functions. Chemically, nucleosides are purine and pyrimidine bases covalently linked via N-glycosidic bonds in the C1 carbon position to b-D-ribose or b-D-deoxyribose, a 5-carbon ring sugar moiety. Nucleotides are phosphorylated in the 5# carbon position of the pentose sugar. In general, the literature on the involvement of nucleosides and nucleotides in synaptic neurotransmission is growing exponentially; conceivably, some of the recent data pertaining to guanosine (and inosine) in this area is relevant to our understanding of CNS manifestations of the Lesch-Nyhan syndrome and neurodegenerative disorders. The Lesch-Nyhan syndrome, a rare X-linked recessive disorder, highlighted the importance of ‘‘salvaging’’ the purine bases hypoxanthine and guanine; the disorder results from an Clin Neuropharmacol Volume 28, Number 1, January – February 2005 Clin Neuropharmacol Volume 28, Number 1, January – February 2005 almost complete deficiency of the enzyme hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase (HPRT). This enzyme catalyzes the reutilization of hypoxanthine and guanine in the energetically favorable synthesis of the nucleotides inosine monophosphate (IMP) and guanosine monophosphate (GMP), respectively; when HPRT is absent or deficient, accelerated de novo purine biosynthesis is stimulated as a result of the accumulation of 5phosphoribosyl-1-pyrophosphate (PRPP), a substrate for both HPRT and the de novo pathway, and/or reduced end-product inhibition.2,28 The neurologic manifestations of the Lesch-Nyhan syndrome include spasticity, mental retardation, choreoathetosis, aggression, and the very dramatic compulsive selfmutilation. CNS symptoms of the disorder are manifested within the first year of life and include irritability, feeding difficulties, delayed motor development, and extrapyramidal symptoms characterized by chorea and fine athetotic movements of the extremities. Moreover, although accurate estimates of intelligence are difficult to make because of motor and speech problems, the majority of patients are moderately to severely mentally retarded. Self-injurious behavior, especially self-biting of the mouth, tongue, and fingers, is a dramatic and almost invariant symptom with a variable age of onset from 6 months to 16 years. The pathophysiological involvement of purines and their metabolism in the mediation of these symptoms has been sought but, nonetheless, remains both uncertain and elusive. Normally, HPRT activity is highest in the brain, especially the basal ganglia, and the soluble cytoplasmic enzyme constitutes up to 0.05% of the brain’s total soluble protein.29 Thus, the salvage of purine bases and their rapid and energetically efficient reutilization for the synthesis of purine nucleotides appears to be critical in the brain. Guanine-based purines are involved in synaptic transmission; for example, the exchange of GDP and GTP and the hydrolysis of GTP while bound to heterotrimeric G proteins anchored to the membrane are critical steps in the regulation of the initiation and duration of several second messenger cascades.26 Recent work on the role that guanosine plays in the modulation of glutamatergic neurotransmission prompted our interest in the Lesch-Nyhan syndrome.9,10 Conceivably, diminished reutilization of free guanine bases secondary to absent or negligent HPRT activity and relatively high guanase activity in brain could lead to deficient pools of guanosine associated with glutamatergic synapses in Lesch-Nyhan syndrome. Guanosine promotes astrocytic reuptake of Lglutamate, an important excitatory neurotransmitter in the brain. Thus, guanosine may be an important physiological mechanism for dampening or terminating the synaptic actions of L-glutamate. This hypothesis is interesting but difficult to test because of the many small and rapidly turning over metabolic and neurotransmitter pools of guanine-based purines. Nonetheless, if a guanosine deficiency were to exist in Lesch-Nyhan syndrome, the administration of guanosine itself or functional analogues that could promote glutamate reuptake and/or excitatory amino acid receptor antagonists might be useful pharmacotherapeutic agents to consider in the treatment of this disorder. The hypothesis developed in this paper focuses primarily on the pathophysiologic role of a deficiency of guanineq 2005 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Lesch-Nyhan Syndrome and Guanine-Based Purines based purines in the Lesch-Nyhan syndrome. The neurobiology of adenine-based purines, especially adenosine, has been more thoroughly studied.26 However, mathematical modeling of the effects of HPRT efficiency on purine metabolism suggest that depletion of guanine-based purines may be a more significant consequence than depletion of adenine-based purines. In Vivo and In Vitro Studies of Neurodevelopmental Abnormalities of Dopaminergic Systems The earliest studies of the CNS manifestations implicated abnormalities of dopamine, especially in the basal ganglia, which may explain some of the movement abnormalities.2,13,15 Specifically, the amount of dopamine and its principal metabolite homovanillic acid, and the activities of dopa decarboxylase and tyrosine hydroxylase, key enzymes involved in dopamine biosynthesis, were significantly reduced in striatum in 3 autopsied brains from patients with less than 1% of the normal activity of HPRT in striatal tissue and 1% to 2% of the normal HPRT activity in thalamus and cortex.15 There was also a significant decrease in the concentration of dopamine and homovanillic acid in the nucleus accumbens, whereas normal concentrations of dopamine were observed in the substantia nigra. These neurochemical data suggested that the density of ‘‘arborization’’ of the dopamine axon terminals in striatum and limbic structures, whose cell bodies originate in the midbrain, is reduced in Lesch-Nyhan syndrome.15 Dopamine is concentrated within axon terminals in striatal and limbic structures. An additional postmortem study of two brains from patients with Lesch-Nyhan syndrome was consistent with a reduction of the dopamine content in the caudate nucleus.20 Moreover, the density of cells that were immunocytochemically stained for the presence of the D2 dopamine receptor was dramatically increased in the two putamens from the patients with Lesch-Nyhan syndrome, relative to the mean value of 5 control patients without any significant neuropathological findings. Also, the putamenal cells from the patients with Lesch-Nyhan syndrome that were stained were more densely labeled than the stained cells in the controls. Although not as dramatic as the increased density of putamenal cells stained for the D2 dopamine receptor, relative to the controls, there were also small increases in the number of cells immunoreactive for the D2 dopamine receptor in the caudate nucleus and D1 dopamine receptor in the putamen and caudate nucleus of the two patients with Lesch-Nyhan syndrome. Consistent with the presence of pathology of the basal ganglia in Lesch-Nyhan syndrome, neurons in the caudate nucleus and putamen from the two patients with Lesch-Nyhan syndrome were immunoreactive for methionine-enkephalin, an endogenous opioid that is involved in self-mutilation and nociception, whereas no methionine-enkephalin immunoreactivity could be demonstrated in the caudate nucleus and putamen from the controls. Finally, the density of medium-sized spiny neurons was increased in the putamen of the two patients with Lesch-Nyhan syndrome, relative to the controls. Interestingly, the authors note that these findings are similar to the PET findings of patients with Parkinson’s disease, who show an 29 Deutsch et al Clin Neuropharmacol Volume 28, Number 1, January – February 2005 increased density of the D2 dopamine receptor and content of methionine-enkephalin in putamen. The authors ascribed the increased density of D2 dopamine receptors in Lesch-Nyhan syndrome to decreased activity of presynaptic dopaminergic neurons.20 Also, the increased density of medium-sized spiny neurons could reflect the maldevelopment of dopamine terminals. The increased content of methionine-enkephalin may have more to do with the motor abnormalities than selfmutiliation and decreased nociception. There were no differences in the immunoreactivity for methionine-enkephalin along the pain pathways between the patients with LeschNyhan syndrome and the five controls. Of course, the postmortem findings must be regarded as tentative and provocative in view of the small sample sizes in the postmortem studies.15,20 Blinded review of the magnetic resonance imaging scans of a series of 7 patients with Lesch-Nyhan syndrome (age range 22 to 35 years), including volumetric analysis of the basal ganglia, revealed evidence of both reduced basal ganglia volume, especially in the caudate nucleus, and total cerebral volume, compared with 7 healthy age- and sex-matched controls.12 The patients with Lesch-Nyhan syndrome showed greater variability in their total brain volume, whereas little variability was observed in the controls. The patients had the classic form of the illness with levels of HPRT activity below 1.6% in erythrocyte lysates and fibroblast cultures. On blinded review, 3 patients were reported to have small and 2 patients were reported to have probably small caudates; additionally, the putamens of 2 patients were read as possibly small. Consistent with atrophy of the caudate nucleus, the bicaudate distances of the patients were larger. Quantitative volumetric analysis showed that the volume of the caudate nucleus was significantly reduced by 34%, and total brain volume was reduced significantly by 17% in the patients. Clearly, the HPRT deficiency is associated with disruption of normal brain development, and the pathologic process in the basal ganglia is likely to account for the dystonia and movement abnormalities in Lesch-Nyhan syndrome. Sequential analysis of CSF levels of homovanillic acid (HVA), the principal dopamine metabolite, was performed in 4 patients with classic Lesch-Nyhan syndrome (erythrocyte HPRT activity ,1%), whose ages were 1.5 to 17 years at the time of study entry, over a 5-year period.22 With the exception of 1 CSF sample, the CSF HVA levels of the patients were lower than the mean HVA value of the age-matched controls. Further, 10 of the 19 samples assayed for HVA were below the control range, and 2 of them were more than 2 standard deviations below the mean of the age-matched controls. Sequential analysis of CSF levels of 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid (5-HIAA), the principal serotonin metabolite, was within the control range. The diminished CSF levels of HVA are consistent with diminished turnover of dopamine or its accelerated egress out of the CSF compartment. However, in view of the normal levels of CSF 5-HIAA and the fact that HVA and 5-HIAA probably share a common mechanism for transport out of the CSF, the data are most consistent with diminished dopamine turnover in Lesch-Nyhan syndrome. The dopamine that is released from terminals in the caudate and putamen contribute significantly to the content of HVA in 30 CSF. In view of this, lowered CSF HVA levels in Lesch-Nyhan syndrome implicate the basal ganglia in the emergence of at least some of the CNS symptoms (eg, choreoathetosis). Perhaps a diminished release of dopamine from terminals within basal ganglia leads to a compensatory up-regulation in the sensitivity of dopamine receptors.22 The density of the presynaptic dopamine transporter can be measured in humans in vivo with the positron emission tomography (PET) ligand b-carbomethoxy-3b-4-fluorophenyltropane (CFT; WIN-35,428). This ligand has been used to study the degeneration of dopaminergic nerve terminals, particularly in the caudate and putamen. Six adult patients (age range 19–35 years) with the classic presentation of the LeschNyhan syndrome were shown to have dramatic reductions (.50%) in the density of dopamine transporters in the caudate and putamen compared with 3 adult patients with RETT syndrome and with 10 age-matched normal volunteers, using WIN-35,428 and 3 different approaches to measuring the density of the dopamine transporter.30 Furthermore, volumetric measurements using MRI were performed on 5 of the patients with Lesch-Nyhan syndrome and revealed a significant 30% reduction in caudate volume; even after correction for a possible confounding effect of reduced caudate volume, the significant reduction in the density of presynaptic dopamine transporters in the caudate persisted (in fact, the magnitude of the reduction was larger). The diminished binding of WIN35,428 in Lesch-Nyhan syndrome is consistent with a loss of dopaminergic nerve terminals or down-regulation of the dopamine transporter in the basal ganglia in this disorder. PET data obtained with [18F]fluorodopa, an analogue of dopa, can provide in vivo information about the activity of dopa decarboxylase and the storage of dopamine in presynaptic nerve terminals. With this compound, the presynaptic uptake of [18F]fluorodopa and its conversion to [18F]fluorodopamine and storage in presynaptic dopaminergic terminals was studied in 12 male patients with Lesch-Nyhan syndrome (age range 10–20 years) and 15 controls (9 male and 6 female; age range 12–23 years).8 In all of the patients, the activity of HPRT in erythrocytes or fibroblasts was less than 1% of control values; further, the patients manifested both aggression and self-injury. The patients were wheelchair-bound and required the use of full or partial restraints 100% of the time. The patients and controls were compared on the amount of [18F]fluorodopa activity in 4 dopaminergic regions of interest: putamen, caudate nucleus, frontal cortex, and ventral tegmental complex. The ventral tegmental complex contained the dopaminergic cell bodies that project to the striatum and frontal cortex. The results showed that the patients with Lesch-Nyhan syndrome had highly significant reductions of [18F]fluorodopa activity in all 4 dopaminergic regions of interest; the magnitude of the reductions ranged from 31% in the putamen to 57% in the ventral tegmental complex. There were also interesting associations that emerged between the severity of aggression against others and [18F]fluorodopa activity in the putamen and ventral tegmental complex.8 Reduced [18F]fluorodopa activity in the basal ganglia discriminated perfectly between patients and healthy controls. Moreover, the reduced activity in the ventral tegmental complex and frontal cortex suggests that the HPRT deficiency affects both the cell q 2005 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Clin Neuropharmacol Volume 28, Number 1, January – February 2005 bodies and terminals of the mesolimbic, mesocortical, and nigrostriatal dopaminergic projections. However, these latter conclusions must be viewed tentatively because of the low levels of [18F]fluorodopa activity in the frontal cortex and ventral tegmental complex and the small size of the ventral tegmental complex; thus, measurements in these areas are less reliable. Additionally, noradrenergic terminals contribute to [18F]fluorodopa activity in the frontal cortex; dopa is the precursor of both dopamine and norepinephrine. Thus, the potential noise resulting from the contributions of noradrenergic projections must be considered. In any event, the data are consistent with an effect of HPRT deficiency on dopamine systems in brain.8 The HPRT-deficient knockout mouse, an animal model of the Lesch-Nyhan syndrome, has been used to study the reduced density of dopaminergic fibers extending to the caudoputamen and its relation to the enzyme deficiency.3 The density of the neuritic arborization of dopaminergic neurons cultured from the cerebral hemispheres of 14-day-old HPRTdeficient knockout mice and appropriate controls was studied in vitro.3 The proliferation of glial cells was suppressed in these cultures, and the dopaminergic neurons were identified immunochemically with rabbit polyclonal antibodies to tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), the enzyme catalyzing the ratelimiting step in catecholamine biosynthesis. Adrenergic neurons were distinguished from dopaminergic neurons by their additional immunochemical staining with antibody to dopamine b-hydroxylase. A stereologic methodology was employed using light microscopy to measure the total fiber length of individual dopaminergic neurons (ie, those stained only with the polyclonal antibodies to TH). The ‘‘dendrites’’ of 100 HPRT-deficient and 100 control neurons were measured at different time points. On the eighth day in culture, although there were no significant differences in the total number of dopaminergic neurons, significant differences emerged with respect to the average fiber length per dopaminergic neuron: the neuritic length of the HPRT-deficient cells was 32% shorter (P , 0.025).3 Thus, the morphologic consequence of the enzyme deficiency is an apparent defective development of dopaminergic neurons characterized by decelerated dendritic outgrowth; they are able to survive but cannot make an enriched network of synaptic connections. In contrast, in an in vitro study examining the trophic effects of glial cell line–derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) on the survivability, morphologic development, and function of dopaminergic cells in primary cultures derived from wildtype and HPRT-deficient mouse embryonic midbrain (day 16.5), the 2 cell lines showed no significant differences in their survivability or morphology in the presence or absence of GDNF.24 Dopaminergic cells were identified in these cultures immunocytochemically with mouse monoclonal antibody to TH. In the absence of GDNF, a survival-promoting factor for dopamine neurons, the number of TH-positive wild-type and HPRT-deficient cells decreased rapidly; approximately 50% of the cells were lost by the fifth day in culture, continuing to approximately 10% to 15% of the original number by the 10th day in culture. GDNF stabilized the survival of both embryonic wild-type and HPRT-deficient dopamine cells with no difference observed between the cell lines in their q 2005 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Lesch-Nyhan Syndrome and Guanine-Based Purines sensitivity to GDNF’s cytoprotective effect. Similarly, from a morphologic perspective, the wild-type and HPRT-deficient cells were equally responsive to the ability of GDNF to stimulate the extension of neuritic processes. Thus, there was no differential effect of GDNF on the survivability and fiber arborization of the wild-type and HPRT-deficient cells. Also, in the absence of GDNF, in this study, the HPRT-deficient TH-positive embryonic mesencephalic cells did not show any differences in terms of their survivability or morphologic differentiation, compared with the wild-type controls. However, although differences did not emerge between the wildtype and HPRT-deficient cells in terms of survivability and morphology, under the influence of GDNF, the cultured wildtype cells showed statistically significant increases in both dopamine uptake and dopamine content.24 Thus, important functions of the neuritic extensions of the wild-type embryonic mesencephalic dopaminergic neurons, especially dopamine uptake and storage, were more responsive to the trophic influence of GDNF. The authors concluded that in view of GDNF’s inability to restore the functioning of dopaminergic neurons in the HPRT-deficient condition, this specific neurotrophic factor may have little, if any, therapeutic value in Lesch-Nyhan syndrome.24 Using a quantitative morphologic approach to the assessment of differentiation in cell culture, N2aTG, the HPRT-deficient nondopaminergic neuroblastoma cell line, differentiated more over a period of 2 days than control HPRTpositive N2A cells.7 Measures of differentiation included the percentage of cells with neurites, the average neurite length, and the average number of neurites per cell. The cell lines also differed with respect to their proliferation: the HPRT-deficient cells proliferated less. The density of the cultured cells was a factor that influenced proliferation. Thus, the in vitro data show a clear link between HPRT activity and proliferation and morphologic development of neurons, which may be relevant to the disruption of the brain’s microarchitecture in LeschNyhan syndrome.7 When grown in vitro, HPRT-deficient cell lines derived from rat (B103-4C) and mouse (N2aTG) neuroblastoma showed abnormalities of proliferation and differentiation compared with their control lines; these cells serve as models of the development of nondopaminergic neurons.6,7 These HPRTdeficient cells are more ‘‘adhesive’’ and have altered intracellular concentrations of nucleotides. The mouse N2aTG HPRT-deficient cell line was derived from spinal cord, and the rat B103-4C HPRT-deficient cell line was derived from brain. The total amount of HPRT-deficient N2aTG mouse cell proliferation and the rate of proliferation of the rat HPRTdeficient B103-4C cells were reduced over 4 days in culture. The morphologic complexity of both lines of HPRT-deficient cells was described as more intricate. Over a period of 2 days in culture, a higher percentage of the HPRT-deficient cells had neurites, and the average neuritic length per cell was longer, compared with their controls. Further, the HPRT-deficient mouse cell line showed a higher average number of neurites per cell. The somal area of the HPRT-deficient cells was also greater. These in vitro data clearly support an effect of HPRT deficiency on the proliferation and differentiation of neurons. Also, the effect of HPRT deficiency on morphologic measures 31 Deutsch et al Clin Neuropharmacol Volume 28, Number 1, January – February 2005 of development may differ depending on whether the cell is dopaminergic or nondopaminergic.6 When challenged to differentiate, the ‘‘dopaminergic’’ HPRT-deficient PC12 neuroblastoma cell line shows a reduced neurite outgrowth. In any event, although the connection between HPRT deficiency and neuronal development is not known, the failure of nerve cells to salvage free purine basis has an effect on their proliferation and differentiation. There are some suggestive clinical data in support of dopamine receptor supersensitivity in Lesch-Nyhan syndrome.11 Two patients (ages 20 months and 15 years) were treated with fluphenazine. The 20-month-old patient was reported to show improved motor ability and decreased selfbiting. The 15-year-old patient did not show any beneficial effect while on active medication; however, the frequency and severity of self-biting increased after the fluphenazine was stopped. In the first instance, fluphenazine may have blocked up-regulated dopamine receptors, whereas in the second case, fluphenazine may have led to further up-regulation of dopamine receptor sensitivity. Self-biting, a consequence of the additional up-regulation, may have been unmasked with fluphenazine’s discontinuation in the second case. Because haloperidol, which is a more selective D2 dopamine receptor antagonist than fluphenazine, was not shown to be effective in Lesch-Nyhan syndrome, the authors suggested that D1 dopamine receptors may be up-regulated.11 The arborization of the dopaminergic terminals in the striatum, which begins at about 3 months of age in the human, may heighten the demand for purine nucleotides.2 This heightened demand may explain the vulnerability of developing nigrostriatal dopamine terminals to HPRT deficiency and the time of emergence of the first symptoms in LeschNyhan syndrome. Additionally, metabolic consequences of HPRT-deficiency may include oxidative stress; nigrostriatal dopamine neurons are particularly sensitive to the lethal and toxic effects of oxidative stress.26,27 Thus, this sensitivity of dopaminergic projections to oxidative stress may serve as the link between HPRT-deficiency and striatal involvement in Lesch-Nyhan syndrome. Potential Pathophysiological Role of Purines, Especially Guanine-Based Purines, in Neurologic Manifestations Altered purine metabolism has been studied in vitro in cultures of neurons and astroglia prepared from the brains of HPRT-deficient knockout mice and an HPRT-deficient neuroma cell line.31 Collectively, these studies show clear consequences of this biochemical lesion with respect to intracellular concentrations of both purine and pyrimidine nucleotides and the free purine and pyrimidine bases and their concentrations in the culture media. However, these studies may be only suggestive of possible consequences for small, rapidly turning over pools of purine and pyrimidine bases and their derivatives that may exist within discrete regions of specific neurons and glial elements, where they may be involved in processes such as synaptic transmission. In both cultured neuroma and astroglia, the studies showed that accelerated incorporation of radiolabeled adenine into nucleotides occurs as a consequence of the virtual absence of the 32 incorporation of radiolabeled hypoxanthine into nucleotides in the HPRT-deficient condition. Further, the rate of de novo purine synthesis, as reflected in the incorporation of [14C]formate into purines, is increased about 4- to almost 10-fold in cultured neuroma and astroglia, respectively.31 These metabolic results were expected and probably are attributable to the increased availability of PRPP. In cultured HPRT-deficient neuroma and astroglia, relative to HPRT-positive control cells, there was an increased rate of disappearance of prelabeled adenine nucleotides from within the cells after a 24-hour period of incubation, which was associated with an increased concentration of radiolabeled purines appearing in the culture medium. The increased concentration of labeled purines in the culture medium of HPRT-deficient cells may result primarily from an increased excretion of hypoxanthine by these cells. Thus, because the hypoxanthine endogenously produced by the HPRT-deficient cells is not reutilized, it is excreted. Elevated levels of hypoxanthine may influence GABAergic neurotransmission, serving as a low-affinity endogenous benzodiazepine-like ligand.1,23 In view of the high levels of guanase activity in the brain, the in vitro studies suggest that HPRTdeficient cells may be relatively deficient in, or depleted of, intracellular guanine and its derivatives; that is, exogenous guanine cannot be salvaged, and what exists is a substrate for guanase. Guanase catalyzes the conversion of guanine to xanthine and ammonia. There is the possibility that as a result of the failure to salvage guanine in Lesch-Nyhan syndrome and the catabolic efficiency of guanase, neurotoxic accumulation of ammonia may occur.17,31 As noted, in neurons, the rate of the degradative deamination of guanine to xanthine by guanase is significantly greater than its anabolic incorporation into nucleotides by HPRT; this is especially true in mature neurons.4 As a result of the relatively lower availability of guanine because of the high activity of guanase in brain, and the relatively higher availability of hypoxanthine because of the absence of xanthine oxidase activity, the HPRT-catalyzed incorporation of hypoxanthine into nucleotides is about 3-fold greater than that of guanine. Guanase activity in brain and its regulation of guanine availability may be very important to synaptic neurotransmission. The enzyme has a cytosolic localization, and its activity is high and unevenly distributed in the brain. The highest levels of guanase activity are found in the thalamus and cerebral hemispheres. Interestingly, inhibition of guanase activity was associated with decreased binding of benzodiazepines to human brain membranes.4 Moreover, under basal conditions, radioactivity incorporated into guanine nucleotides is quickly transferred to purine degradation products, consistent with the fast turnover rate of the guanine nucleotide pool; the turnover rate of the guanine nucleotide pool in brain is estimated to be at least twice that of the adenine nucleotide pool.4 Thus, it can be expected that the metabolic stress of HPRT deficiency in brain could lead to a depletion of guanine-based purines in areas critical to normal synaptic neurotransmission, including the area of glutamatergic synapses. Depletion of guanine-containing compounds, especially within discrete pools, may affect energy metabolism, second messenger systems, and modulation of glutamatergic q 2005 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Clin Neuropharmacol Volume 28, Number 1, January – February 2005 neurotransmission, among other consequences. These metabolic consequences of HPRT deficiency in the brain may contribute to the neurologic manifestations of Lesch-Nyhan syndrome. As noted, relative to other organs, the brain is more dependent on the salvage pathway for the synthesis of purine nucleotides than it is on de novo synthesis. Thus, it was of interest that the cellular content of GTP and ATP did not differ between HPRT-deficient and HPRT-positive cultured neurons; these neurons were cultured from the HPRT-deficient knockout and wild-type mice, respectively. The content of UTP, a pyrimidine nucleotide, in the HPRT-deficient cultured neurons was elevated. In contrast, the HPRT-deficient cultured astroglial cells showed significant reductions of ATP and GTP concentrations as well as elevated levels of UTP. Elevated levels of pyrimidine nucleotides may be caused by the increased availability of PRPP, a limiting substrate for the synthesis of purine and pyrimidine nucleotides. The data suggest that astroglia may experience a greater impact of the HPRT deficiency on their purine nucleotide pools than neurons.16,31 The astroglial deficit can be expected to impact energy metabolism and neurotransmission. In summary, the HPRT-deficient rat neuroma cell line, which serves as a model system for HPRT-deficient neurons, revealed the following alterations of purine metabolism: accumulation of PRPP and accelerated de novo synthesis, excessive production and excretion of hypoxanthine, and increased turnover rate of adenine nucleotides.16 The synthesis of pyrimidine nucleotides is also enhanced, as reflected in increased cellular levels of UTP. In addition to these findings, primary cultures of HPRT-deficient astroglial cells, derived from the cerebral cortices of a strain of newborn HPRT-deficient transgenic mice, showed lowered cellular levels of ADP, ATP, and GTP. The lowered levels of purine nucleotides in HPRT-deficient astroglial cells suggest that, in cells that are heavily dependent on and deficient in the salvage pathway for maintenance of their cellular pools of purine nucleotides, accelerated de novo synthesis cannot keep up with the cellular demands. The data suggest that elevated extracellular levels of hypoxanthine and diminished intracellular pools of purine nucleotides within the brain contribute to the neurologic manifestations of Lesch-Nyhan syndrome. Further, the consequences of these metabolic derangements may depend on and differ as a function of the specific stage of neurodevelopment and neurogenesis. Also, in addition to obvious effects on energy metabolism and the maintenance of unequal ionic concentration gradients across membranes, the decreased intracellular purine nucleotide content may disrupt synaptic transmission as a result of a failure to replenish rapidly turning over cellular pools in discrete synaptic areas. Inosine and hypoxanthine were extracted, purified, and identified as possible endogenous ligands existing within bovine brain that are capable of inhibiting the competitive binding of [3H]diazepam to the central benzodiazepine binding site.1,23 The ability of resolved fractions of the bovine brain extract to inhibit the binding of [3H]diazepam to both a crude membrane preparation of rat cerebral cortex (receptor binding assay) and rabbit antibody generated against diazepam (radioimmunoassay) served as the assay procedures to purify inosine and hypoxanthine from the extract and identify them as possible endogenous ligands for the central benzodiazepine q 2005 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Lesch-Nyhan Syndrome and Guanine-Based Purines binding site. Although they bound with low affinity, inosine and hypoxanthine exhibited specificity for the central benzodiazepine binding site, showing little ability to inhibit the binding of [3H]diazepam to the peripheral benzodiazepine binding site in kidney or liver, or the binding of radioligands to opiate receptors ([3H]dihydromorphine), muscarinic acetylcholine receptors ([3H]quinuclidinyl benzilate), the GABAA agonist recognition site ([3H]muscimol), and b-adrenergic receptors ([3H]dihydroalprenolol). Moreover, the IC50 of guanosine (1.0 mM) to inhibit the specific binding of [3H]diazepam was almost identical to that of inosine and hypoxanthine (1.3 mM). Again, although the binding is of low affinity, pathologic interference with the endogenous modulation of GABAergic neurotransmission may be a consideration in Lesch-Nyhan syndrome, especially with respect to elevated concentrations of hypoxanthine. The purines may also be physiologically relevant modulators of GABAergic neurotransmission as well because, as noted by Skolnick et al23 and Asano and Spector,1 brain concentrations of inosine, hypoxanthine, and adenosine rise after chemical or electrical depolarization. Further, significant pharmacological effects of benzodiazepines are observed under conditions when a relatively small percentage of central benzodiazepine binding sites are occupied (eg, 10%–20%). For example, 50% of mice are protected against pentylenetetrazole (PTZ)-induced seizures when only about 15% of the central benzodiazepine binding sites are occupied by diazepam.23 Thus, even at the estimated normal physiological concentrations of inosine and hypoxanthine (reported to be between 20 and 60 mM), in spite of their low affinity, they may modulate inhibitory tone in the brain.23 Using primary cultures of astrocytes prepared from the cerebral hemispheres of 18- to 19-day-old rat fetuses, it was shown that under basal conditions they spontaneously release guanine-based purines; in fact, the amount of guanine-based purines released over a 3-hour period was greater than that of adenine-based purines.5 Moreover, the exposure of these cultures to hypoxic and hypoglycemic conditions resulted in a sustained severalfold increase in the release of guanine- and adenine-based purines over basal values during and up to 90 minutes after the insult. Guanosine, in particular, showed a progressive increase of its extracellular concentration after the stress. Importantly, the increased release of guanine- and adenine-based purines during and after the combined hypoxic and hypoglycemic insults was not an artifact of diminished cell viability.5 The release of guanine-based purines in this stroke model is consistent with hypothesis that these compounds, especially guanosine, may exert immediate modulatory effects on synaptic transmission and more sustained trophic effects. Conceivably, if discrete intracellular astrocytic pools of guanine-based purines are depleted in Lesch-Nyhan syndrome, the ability to modulate synaptic transmission under conditions of hypoxia and hypoglycemia would be compromised in this metabolic disorder. The potential ability of exogenously administered guanosine and inosine to provide an alternative source of energy to ATP has been suggested as an explanatory hypothesis for their neuroprotective effects in the context of oxidative stress and damage.14 For example, after exposure to rotenone, an inhibitor of the mitochondrial respiratory chain, 33 Deutsch et al Clin Neuropharmacol Volume 28, Number 1, January – February 2005 and the induction of chemical hypoxia, inosine and guanosine were shown to preserve the viability of astrocytes and neurons in primary mixed cultures of spinal cord prepared from 13- to 14-day mouse embryos.14 Presumably, these primary cultures represent ‘‘normal’’ cells, as opposed to transformed cultures derived from tumor cells; thus, the neuroprotective effect of the purine nucleosides to chemical hypoxia may be a normally expected response. The spinal cord neurons were more sensitive to the lethal toxic effects of rotenone (5 mM) than the astrocytes; more than 90% of the neurons lost viability 260 minutes after the addition of rotenone. Inosine afforded dosedependent protection, delaying cell death and preserving viability over a dosage range of 125 mM to 1 mM. From a morphologic perspective, inosine was also able to delay neuronal swelling and disintegration of dendrites in a dosedependent manner after the addition of rotenone to the cultures. The likely cause of neuronal swelling is diminished production and decreased quantities of ATP as a result of rotenone’s interference with mitochondrial respiration and oxidative phosphorylation. The hydrolysis of ATP is essential to the maintenance of unequal ionic concentration gradients across cell membranes and preservation of normal osmolality within the cell. As for inosine, the addition of guanosine (500 mM) to the primary mixed cultures of mouse embryonic spinal cord 3 minutes before the addition of rotenone (5 mM) preserved both total cell and neuronal cell viability. The protective effect of inosine (500 mM) on neuronal cell viability decayed rapidly when it was added to the cultures at increasing times after the addition of rotenone; it was most potent when added 3 minutes prior to and 5 minutes after the addition of rotenone, whereas its neuroprotective effect was almost completely lost when it was added 30 minutes after rotenone. Again, it was hypothesized that the ability of these purine nucleosides to maintain cellular levels of ATP above a critical threshold under conditions of hypoxia serves as the mechanism for their preservation of cell viability. Indeed, the addition of a purine nucleoside phosphorylase inhibitor to the cultures, which would interfere with a pathway for the participation of purine nucleosides in the production of ATP under anaerobic conditions, attenuated their protective effect; this effect of the purine nucleosides to preserve cell viability was most dramatic with neurons. The data also suggested that neuronal protection by purine nucleosides is either dependent on or enhanced by the presence of glia.14 In brain, there are probably several discrete pools of nucleosides and nucleotides subserving functions in both metabolism and neurotransmission. Presumably, these pools within the brain are perturbed in Lesch-Nyhan syndrome. As already emphasized, relative to other organs, the brain is more dependent on the salvage pathway catalyzed by HPRT to maintain pools of nucleosides and nucleotides than the de novo pathway for the biosynthesis of purines.2 The dependence on the salvage pathway may be especially pronounced in the basal ganglia. Unfortunately, various attempts to replenish the presumptively depleted pools of nucleosides and nucleotides in brain in patients with Lesch-Nyhan syndrome with the exogenous dietary administration of GMP, AMP, IMP, inosine, and adenine to treat CNS symptoms have not met with success.2 Some of this failure could relate to 34 problems with intestinal absorption, poor transport across cell membranes, uptake into peripheral pools (eg, within erythrocytes), metabolism within the periphery, and poor penetrability across the blood–brain barrier.2 However, there are data supporting the existence of nucleoside transporters across intestinal cells and the blood–brain barrier25; thus, poor bioavailability of nucleosides may not account for their lack of therapeutic efficacy. GUANINE-BASED PURINES: MODULATORS OF GLUTAMATERGIC NEUROTRANSMISSION AND TROPHIC FUNCTIONS IN THE CNS From a quantitative perspective, L-glutamate is one of the most important neurotransmitters in mammalian brain, mediating synaptic transmission at 30% to 50% of all synapses. Thus, regulation of its extracellular concentration is crucial for normal physiological function; elevated levels of Lglutamate are excitotoxic and can lead to cell death. Astrocytes have a sodium-dependent uptake system for L-glutamate that may be particularly relevant at high (100 mM), as opposed to low (1 mM), concentrations of L-glutamate.10 Thus, the astrocytic uptake of L-glutamate may be critical for maintaining its extracellular concentrations below neurotoxic levels. By use of primary astrocyte cultures prepared from the cortices of 1-day-old Wistar rats and rat brain cortical slices, guanosine was shown to promote the sodium-dependent uptake of Lglutamate (100 mM) in a dose-dependent manner; uptake was measured for 7 minutes.9 The minimum effective concentration of guanosine was 100 nM, which resulted in a 19% increase over control values. The maximal stimulation of uptake by guanosine was 63% over control values, and the EC50 was 2.47 6 0.27 mM. Importantly, adenosine (100 mM) affected neither basal uptake nor the stimulatory effect of guanosine (1 mM). Theophylline (100 mM), a nonspecific A1/A2 adenosine receptor antagonist, stimulated basal uptake of L-glutamate but did not affect the stimulatory effect of guanosine (1 mM). Finally, dipyridamole (40 mM), a nucleoside transport inhibitor, stimulated basal uptake, and this stimulatory effect was additive with that of guanosine.9 The data suggest that guanosine, a guanine-based purine, mediates a relatively specific stimulatory effect on the astrocytic uptake of L-glutamate because the effect was not mimicked by adenosine, an adenine-based purine, nor blocked by theophylline. Thus, this effect is probably not mediated by adenosine receptors. Further, the effect is an extracellular one, occurring at the cell’s surface because it was not abolished by the nucleoside transport inhibitor. In fact, inhibition of nucleoside transport enhanced the stimulatory effect of guanosine (1 mM), suggesting that more of this nucleoside was available extracellularly for this action, which is mediated at the cell’s surface.9 This stimulatory effect of guanosine (100 and 300 mM) on the uptake of L-glutamate (100 mM) by astrocytic cells in culture could be mimicked by GMP (100 and 300 mM) and GTP (100 and 300 mM). However, a significant additive effect on uptake was not observed with the simultaneous addition of all 3 guanine-based purines to the culture medium (ie, q 2005 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Clin Neuropharmacol Volume 28, Number 1, January – February 2005 guanosine, GMP, and GTP, 100 mM each), compared with the addition of each compound alone. These data are consistent with a saturating effect of guanine-based purines occurring at or just above concentrations of 100 mM and the possibility that 1 of these 3 compounds is mediating the stimulatory effect on uptake; the 3 compounds are metabolically interconvertible with each other. Importantly, a poorly hydrolyzable analogue of GTP was not able to stimulate the uptake of L-glutamate by cultured astrocytes, nor could GMP (100 mM) after cultures were pretreated with 100 mM of a,b-methyleneadenosine 5#diphosphate (AOPCP), the ecto-5#-nucleotidase inhibitor that prevents the conversion of GMP to guanosine. Thus, guanosine appears to mediate the stimulatory effect of all the guanine-based purines.10 Further, the stimulatory effect of guanine-based purines on L-glutamate uptake was not observed with 100 mM concentrations of adenosine, AMP, ADP, or ATP. Finally, guanosine (100 mM) did not affect the uptake of GABA (1 mM) by cultured astrocytes over a period of 3, 10, and 30 minutes. Therefore, guanosine mediates the stimulatory effect of guanine-based purines on the astrocytic uptake of L-glutamate, which is a process that is relatively specific and selective. This stimulatory effect of guanosine was present after cells were treated with an inhibitor of nucleoside transporters, consistent with this action occurring after the binding of guanosine to the cell surface. The astrocytic uptake of L-glutamate is a mechanism for terminating its actions within the synapse; thus, the facilitation of uptake by guanine-based purines may be an important regulator of glutamatergic neurotransmission, especially under excitotoxic conditions. Guanine-based purines (including GTP and GMP) decrease the sodium-independent binding of [3H]glutamate (40 nM) to rat forebrain homogenates under conditions of saturating G proteins with a bound nonhydrolyzable analogue of GTP.19 The sodium-independent binding of [3H]glutamate would most likely label extracellular receptors, whereas binding measured in the presence of sodium ions would also label transporter sites. Magnesium ions were also eliminated from the incubations to measure the binding of [3H]glutamate to cell-surface receptors because magnesium ions are involved in the formation of the receptor/G-protein complex; thus, these results are not likely to be confounded by mechanisms involving the participation of G-proteins. Measurable inhibition of [3H]glutamate binding was observed with a concentration of GMP as low as 0.1 mM, and maximal inhibition of about 30% to 40% was observed over a range of GMP concentrations from 1 mM through 1 mM. These data suggest that guanine-based purines may inhibit the transduction of the glutamate signal, independently of any G-protein ‘‘coupling’’ mechanisms.19 The intracerebroventricular infusion of quinolinic acid (39.2 mM; 4 mL, 156.8 nmol), an excitatory amino acid glutamatergic agonist, produces tonic-clonic seizures in 100% of adult male Wistar rats.25 This dose of quinolinic acid was the lowest dose associated with the induction of seizures in all of the control animals. Using this chemical procedure for the induction of seizures, guanosine and GMP (7.5 mg/kg) were shown to have anticonvulsant effects, even after their peripheral intraperitoneal administration 30 minutes before the infusion of quinolinic acid.25 At an intraperitoneal dose of q 2005 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Lesch-Nyhan Syndrome and Guanine-Based Purines 7.5 mg/kg of guanosine and GMP, about 50% of the animals were protected and did not show any tonic-clonic seizure activity over a 10-minute period after the infusion of quinolinic acid. Importantly, the intraperitoneal administration of guanosine (7.5 mg/kg) or GMP (7.5 mg/kg) was associated with a two- and three-fold increase in the levels of guanosine in the CSF, respectively, whereas levels of GMP and adenosine were unchanged. These data are consistent with the extracellular conversion of guanine nucleotides to guanosine in brain and the latter compound involved in the modulation of glutamatergic neurotransmission.25 The intracerebroventricular infusion of GMP prior to infusion of quinolinic acid provided a dose-dependent protection against the induction of seizures. Consistent with the anticonvulsant effect of guanine-based purines mediated by guanosine, this protective effect of intracerebroventricularly administered GMP was significantly reduced by prior intracerebroventricular infusion of AOPCP, the inhibitor of the ecto-5#-nucleotidase that is responsible for the conversion of GMP to guanosine. Further, AOPCP caused a dramatic reduction in the concentration of guanosine in the CSF after infusion of GMP. The data are also consistent with a rapid extracellular conversion of GMP to guanosine in the brain because, in the absence of AOPCP, the concentration of guanosine was more than 17 times greater than the concentration of GMP five minutes after the intracerebroventricular injection of 4 mL of a 240 mM solution (960 nmol) of GMP. This same dose of GMP reduced the percentage of animals that displayed tonic-clonic seizures after infusion of quinolinic acid from 100% to about 20%, an anticonvulsant effect that was attenuated by AOPCP. Although guanosine and GMP could antagonize seizures precipitated by the intracerebroventricular injection of quinolinic acid, they did not antagonize seizures precipitated by the subcutaneous injection of picrotoxin (3.2 mg/kg).21 Picrotoxin is a noncompetitive GABAA receptor antagonist; thus, the data are consistent with the specificity of the effects of guanosine and GMP for the glutamatergic system. These data are evidence of an important functional role for guanosine as a modulator of glutamatergic neurotransmission in the intact animal; moreover, this anticonvulsant role of guanosine appears to be a direct one that is not dependent on the generation of adenosine. Further, either guanosine or a derivative may be a candidate compound(s) for development as a medication with possible anticonvulsant and neuroprotective effects after oral administration. The transport of nucleosides across intestinal cells and the blood-brainbarrier has been characterized.25 Conceivably, diminished neuromodulatory pools of guanine-based purines contribute in some significant way to the pathophysiology of the LeschNyhan syndrome; unfortunately, replenishing these pools via the exogenous administration of nucleosides may be insufficient to address the neurologic manifestations. These manifestations result from early neurodevelopmental abnormalities, in addition to presumed alterations of synaptic neurotransmission The exogenous administration of guanosine and other guanine-based purines, including their peripheral administration, has functional neurobehavioral consequences, which are likely mediated by an effect on glutamatergic neurotransmission.18 Inhibitory avoidance in rats is a 1-trial aversive learning 35 Deutsch et al Clin Neuropharmacol Volume 28, Number 1, January – February 2005 procedure that is a useful paradigm to test effects of drugs on learning and memory. In this paradigm, the effect on the latency of rats for stepping off a platform is assessed 24 hours after a training session during which they receive an electric footshock immediately after stepping down from the platform. Ordinarily, the latency to step-down is dramatically increased 24 hours after this training session, relative to the control condition. Guanosine (2.0 mg/kg and 7.5 mg/kg, intraperitoneally) showed a significant dose-dependent ability to reduce the latency to step-down from the platform when it was administered 30 minutes before the training session 24 hours earlier.18 This guanosine-induced impairment of inhibitory avoidance performance was reversible: no deficit of treatment with guanosine (7.5 mg/kg) was observed when rats showing the guanosine-induced deficit were resubjected to the training and testing procedures 1 week later. Further, whereas the memory deficit associated with guanosine (7.5 mg/kg) was observed when it was administered 30 minutes before training, there were no significant deficits of inhibitory avoidance performance when it was administered immediately after training or 24 hours before testing. Thus, to affect the process of memory consolidation, guanosine must be administered at least a finite time before the aversive training procedure, and it does not appear to affect memory retrieval for inhibitory avoidance performance. Guanosine did not affect the nociceptive sensitivity to parameters of the electric footshock, nor did it affect open-field behaviors when it was administered before testing. Thus, there is a relatively selective behavioral effect on a specific type of learning and memory involved in the performance of this inhibitory avoidance behavior. Guanosine’s ability to enhance the uptake of L-glutamate by astrocytes suggests that the effect on inhibitory avoidance performance may result from negative modulation or interference with glutamatergic neurotransmission. Glutamatergic mechanisms are very much implicated in learning and memory, especially the induction of hippocampal long-term potentiation. In addition to their effects on neurotransmission, which take place in a time frame of milliseconds to seconds, guaninebased purines and other purines also have important trophic functions, affecting the development, structure, or maintenance of target cells in the brain.17 These trophic actions may take hours to days to evolve fully. Guanosine (10 mM) and GTP (10 mM) have been shown to stimulate the synthesis and release of immunoreactive nerve growth factor from cultured neonatal mouse astrocytes. Thus, some of the trophic actions of purines may be indirect, occurring as a result of stimulating the synthesis and release of trophic factors and/or enhancing the effects of these specific trophic factors. High extracellular levels of guanosine and GTP under conditions of hypoglycemia and hypoxia may secondarily result in increased extracellular levels of adenosine and ATP, whose trophic actions may be mediated, at least in part, by specific purinergic receptors. Conceivably, guanine-based purines would increase extracellular levels of adenine-based purines by interfering with their uptake and metabolism as well as by stimulating their release. Therefore, at least some of the trophic actions of guanine-based purines may be mediated indirectly by adeninebased purines. For example, the ability of guanine-based 36 purines to stimulate proliferation of rat brain microglia in a concentration-dependent manner appears to be mediated by specific purinergic receptors that recognize adenine-based purines. Guanosine and GTP can promote neuritic outgrowth from cultured embryonic mouse hippocampal neurons.17 These ‘‘neuritogenic’’ effects may be synergistic with those of nerve growth factor. Derivatives of hypoxanthine and xanthine are being considered as potential therapeutic agents because of their abilities to stimulate the synthesis and secretion of a variety of growth factors from cultured mouse astrocytes, including nerve growth factor, neurotrophin-3, and a specific fibroblast growth factor. As noted, elevated extracellular levels of hypoxanthine are observed in the brains of patients with Lesch-Nyhan syndrome. Importantly, with respect to a specific neurotrophic role for guanosine, elevated levels may be maintained for up to a week after focal brain injury. In any event, because of the metabolic consequences of an HPRT deficiency and the possibility of diminished availability of guanine-based purines subserving trophic functions, patients with Lesch-Nyhan syndrome may have problems with both neurodevelopment and their ability to respond to a toxic brain insult. DISCUSSION Guanine-based purines are undoubtedly involved in the pathogenesis of the Lesch-Nyhan syndrome. Investigation of this disorder and the neurobiological consequences of the HPRT deficiency will almost certainly clarify our current understanding of the potential roles that guanine-based purines play in neurodevelopment and as neuromodulators and neurotransmitters in addition to their more familiar roles in gene replication and expression, metabolism, and second messenger cascades, among other roles. Data support the possible involvement of hypoxanthine and guanine-based purines, whose levels are perturbed in Lesch-Nyhan syndrome, in neuorotransmission mediated by GABA and L-glutamate, respectively. Additionally, guanine-based purines may have important trophic functions in the brain. HPRT-deficiency is associated with immaturity and dysfunction of dopaminergic nerve terminals; however, the mechanism of this neurodevelopmental abnormality of dopaminergic neurotransmission is unclear. Cell culture systems and HPRT-deficient knockout mice provide good models for conducting many of these studies; additionally, behavioral models have been used successfully to demonstrate the neuromodulatory role of guanine-based purines on glutamatergic systems. Unfortunately, these studies have not yet led to more effective pharmacological strategies for the treatment of Lesch-Nyhan syndrome than the current empirical reliance on antipsychotic medications, benzodiazepines, and antidepressants, which have, at best, only modest efficacy.28 Specialized nonpharmacological operant behavioral strategies may be valuable and essential components of a multimodal therapeutic program for this inherited disorder of purine metabolism. Importantly, a hypothesized deficiency of guanosine in discrete pools associated with glutamatergic synapses might stimulate therapeutic strategies to promote glutamate reuptake and/or antagonism of effects mediated by glutamatergic receptors. q 2005 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Clin Neuropharmacol Volume 28, Number 1, January – February 2005 ACKNOWLEDGMENT The first author would like to thank Dr Rody P. Cox for teaching him about the clinical and metabolic aspects of the Lesch-Nyhan syndrome and serving as the ideal model of a compassionate physician investigator. REFERENCES 1. Asano T, Spector S. Identification of inosine and hypoxanthine as endogenous ligands for the brain benzodiazepine-binding sites. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 1979;76:977–981. 2. Baumeister AA, Frye GD. The biochemical basis of the behavioral disorder in the Lesch-Nyhan syndrome. Neurosci Biobehav Rev. 1985;9:169–178. 3. Boer P, Brosh S, Wasserman L, et al. 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