Thanx for the links, benzyme. That was kind of you.
Arrivederci
Arrivederci
joedirt said:How does your explanation take in account the fact that dmt is found in many other parts of the body as well? That they are all produced in each place they are found and do not move around because they get quickly metabolized?
The same as serotonin. It's produced all over the body as well. DMT production is likely just an offshot pathway of serotonin synthesis is my best guess.
Regarding SAMe, its a co-substrate, not an enzyme. You still need the enzyme to utilize SAMe for adding a methyl group to a tryptamine or protein etc. Unless Im getting my facts wrong here.
Yes I believe that is correct, but there are many enzymes left that haven't been characterized yet.
I don't agree with you about the evidence. I think the proof that it's been found in the brain combined with that fact that brain synthesis pathway's have been found in other primates is stronger evidence than a single experiment showing INMT wasn't there. I could very well be wrong and there could be a bunch of experiments in this regard? I've seen biological assay's show completely different results from the same batch of material. We usually never find out why, we just take a bunch of runs and average the results. I should read the data around INMT more I suppose.
I know you are begin intentionally extreme with the ear example, but I'm still going to point out that talking about DMT being produced by the CNS where it has ample receptors that it binds to in addition to the fact there have been pathway's found in other mammals would quite likely be enough for research grant. Of course you'd need to detail exatly how you were going to search for the pathway and approach it. You might actually be able to do it as an offshot of other research. SO yes in this case I think it does deserve research grant funding were as I'd agree that your random speculation that the ear producing it certainly not worthy of study!![]()
All Im asking here is that when we post in the nexus we try to avoid falling into common misconceptions and speculations and use reliable sources for our claims and good arguments for it. I have nothing against you and I hope you didnt take this as a negative conflict between us, Im glad to have a good dialogue and am ready to learn from your perspective
I don't believe I ever presented an unreliable source and I don't think anything I've said here is that extreme considering the evidence in my mind points towards a brain synthetic pathway....time will tell. We can disagree about which direction the evidence points and I'm ok with that. I mean as you mentioned there are others working on it. And there are plenty of scientist that have educated opinions regarding it even if they haven't published anything on it yet.
I'm sorry for making the friendly bet....it was an attempt to make light of the discussion.
I do agree with you that we should keep the nexus away from common misconceptions things that could be harmful to others, but I'm not ready to lump DMT being made in the brain as a misconception at this point.
I'm always ready to learn more as well and look forward to our future dialogs. This is a great site and you've provided immense insight, protection, and help to others.
zonedn2it said:I guess the point is this: let's say that tomorrow, irrefutable proof is published that states DMT (or even just practiced meditation) is caused by __________, and all biochemical processes are mapped, tracked, explained, etc... Will the "knowledge" of this really add to the ultimate comprehension of these experiences, and their implications?
Certainly the intent here is not to disvalidate this particular pursuit of knowledge, but only to put it in perspective while enjoying the attempt.
joedirt said:Sorry to keep this alive,but I just spoke to our head of biology and would like to share his thoughts on this....I trust him a good bit more than myself when it comes to biological assays.
Looking at figure 2, Part C, he said that the spots we are seeing for the various brain regions are in all likely hood just noise. He walked me through the entire experiment protocol and I agree with him fully.
He did however make the exact same observation that I did about the spinal cords and was pretty intrigued by it.
I walked him through the various evidence for and against it and he can see it both way's (as can I), but ultimately he seems to think that the simplest answer is that it will be produced there.... So that's at least 2 scientists that share that view. one biologist and one chemist.
One further point that he was able to shed light on that I wasn't even considering is the mRNA expression. Note they are measuring the mRNA and not DMT in this experiment. It could very well be that the mRNA's for INMT isn't expressed in the brain at all times. Just like the mRNA's for the enzymes necessary for conversion of melatonin are likely to be absent or very reduced during the noon sun light. I don't have links here, but his argument was pretty compelling that mRNA's are used almost as fast as they are made and are then metabolized to keep the expression from becoming infinite. Makes sense, but I haven't done any leg work here.
So if go back to Rick's original hypothesis that DMT is produced in the pineal gland during times of stress...I'd have to say that this paper does not address that theory in a very good manner for a couple of reasons:
1) They don't address the pineal gland in this research
2) They aren't using a brain that is stressed.
I say Rick's theory is still a pretty reasonable theory in light of the evidence I've looked at thus far. Certainly it's not proof, but it's certainly not proven otherwise either....or at least I have not come across said proof.
Questions I'd like to answer:
1) Does the cerebral spinal fluid have direct access across the BBB? There results clearly show INMT in the spinal cord. It could very well be coming from there....and potentially not have to cross the BBB and be subject to higher MAO concentrations. I'm intrigued about this results from a metaphysical point of view as well, but I'm not going down that path in a science discussion... That thread will come later when I've done more fleshing out of the idea!
2) Does the pineal gland produce INMT or other N-Methylating enzymes and if it so does it do it at different times of the day? We'd obviously expect it at night since melatonin is produced then. But is it found during the day as well...and if so is the concentration greatly reduced?
I still keep my friendly,no wager, bet alive. I say within 2 years we have the proof. Endless I'm not coming to you for potatoes, but if I'm ever on your side of the pond I'd meet up for a beer for sure!
I have no shame in being wrong. I'm just judging the theory as it I see it. the beauty of science is that it won't care what we think. The data will tell the final story.
Peace
benzyme said:HIOMT
not INMT.
the former is well referenced, and the latter isn't magically expressed in the pineal when stressed. no mRNA activation if the mRNA transcripts aren't present.
again, separate pathways in tryptophan metabolism. show evidence otherwise, then this may be refuted.
in the pathway, you'll notice two separate pathways where INMT is expressed... the first path is N-methylation of tryptamine, and the second is N-Methylation of serotonin. activation of the first path inactivates the second.
the second, analogous to the first, likely leads to bufotenine.
joedirt said:DNA is present in all cells... What is the mRNA trnscript that isn't present...and can you provide a link for this...sorry my biology is a little rough.
benzyme said:joedirt said:DNA is present in all cells... What is the mRNA trnscript that isn't present...and can you provide a link for this...sorry my biology is a little rough.
the so-called 'central dogma' of biochemistry is DNA --> mRNA --> protein.
INMT is obviously a protein; therefore, the transcript must be present in the cell for expression.
while it's true that DNA is present in every cell, less than 2% of human DNA encodes for protein synthesis.
you can find this in any biochemistry textbook.
joedirt said:benzyme said:joedirt said:DNA is present in all cells... What is the mRNA trnscript that isn't present...and can you provide a link for this...sorry my biology is a little rough.
the so-called 'central dogma' of biochemistry is DNA --> mRNA --> protein.
INMT is obviously a protein; therefore, the transcript must be present in the cell for expression.
while it's true that DNA is present in every cell, less than 2% of human DNA encodes for protein synthesis.
you can find this in any biochemistry textbook.
yeah I know...I was being a smart ass. I was just wondering if you were going to contribute references or links to back up your statement that the mRNA coFactors aren't ever present. I mean at this point it's pretty obvious that we are just speculating in the realm of what's scientifically possible. I have no skin in the game and if you can show references that prove that I'd be happy to rule it out as a possibility!![]()
unlike AADC, I think its exclusive to endogenous tryptamines.burnt said:Interesting thread.
Are any other endogenous substrates of INMT known?
burnt said:I found a paper that demonstrates N-methylation of tryptamine to n-methyltryptamine occurs in human brain tissue removed during surgery:
Psychomimetic N-methylated Tryptamines: Formation in Brain in vitro and in vivo. Juan M Saavedra and Julius Axelrod (haha his name is axelrod :lol: )
Science Volume 175.
Its an old ass paper. Someone should repeat (or has it been repeated?) using modern chromatographic analysis and gene expression analysis.
benzyme said:what if scientific studies showed evidence that DMT is produced in epithelial cells near the sphincter? would that disappoint you?