Trace amines as intrinsic spinal cord neuromodulators of locomotor network function

Based on their low concentrations in mammalian brain, octopamine, β–phenylethylamine, tyramine, and tryptamine are classified as “trace” amines (TAs) and viewed as metabolic by-products. TAs are related to the classical monoamine transmitters and are synthesized from the same precursor aromatic amino acids. The recent discovery of a family of G protein-coupled receptors preferentially activated by TAs rekindled interest in TAs, but without a known circuitry, their function remains elusive and understudied. We now have anatomical evidence of an endogenous TA system in spinal cord, and show that the TAs recruit locomotor circuits and modulate ongoing locomotion. Our newest evidence suggest the TAs represent a parallel biochemical modulatory system that alters circuit function via a membrane transporter shuttling system that operates independent of synaptic actions. The long-term goal is to understand the physiological relevance of the TAs as an intrinsic modulatory system for subsequent therapeutic manipulation of spinal circuit function.

Gozal, E.A., O’Neill, B., Sawchuk, M.A., Zhu, H., Halder, M., Chou C-C., and Hochman, S. Anatomical and functional evidence for trace amines as unique modulators of locomotor function in the mammalian spinal cord. Front Neural Circuits. (2014) Front. Neural Circuits, 07 November 2014 | doi: 10.3389/fncir.2014.00134.

HOCHMAN,S. Metabolic recruitment of spinal locomotion: intracellular neuromodulation by trace amines and their receptors. Neural Regeneration Research. In press (2015)