Drug/Small Molecule:
levodopa

2D structure

Overview

Generic Names: 3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine; DOPA; L-DOPA; L-Dihydroxyphenylalanine
Trade Names: Bendopa; Brocadopa; Cidandopa; Deadopa; Dopaflex; Dopaidan; Dopal; Dopal-Fher; Dopalina; Dopar; Doparkine; Doparl; Dopasol; Dopaston; Dopastral; Doprin; Eldopal; Eldopar; Eldopatec; Eurodopa; Helfo-Dopa; Insulamina; Laradopa; Larodopa; Ledopa; Levedopa; Levopa; Maipedopa; Parda; Pardopa; Prodopa; Syndopa; Veldopa; Weldopa
Brand Mixtures: Apo-Levocarb CR Controlled-Release Tablets (carbidopa + levodopa); Dom-Levo-Carbidopa (carbidopa + levodopa); Novo-Levocarbidopa (carbidopa + levodopa); Pro-Lecarb-100/10 - Tab (carbidopa + levodopa); Pro-Lecarb-100/25 - Tab (carbidopa + levodopa); Prolopa Cap 50-12.5 (Benserazide + Levodopa); Ratio-Levodopa/Carbidopa (carbidopa + levodopa); Sinemet (carbidopa + levodopa); Sinemet CR (carbidopa + levodopa)
PharmGKB Accession Id: PA450213

Description

The naturally occurring form of dihydroxyphenylalanine and the immediate precursor of dopamine. Unlike dopamine itself, it can be taken orally and crosses the blood-brain barrier. It is rapidly taken up by dopaminergic neurons and converted to dopamine. It is used for the treatment of parkinsonian disorders and is usually given with agents that inhibit its conversion to dopamine outside of the central nervous system. PubChem (source: Drug Bank)

Indication

For the treatment of idiopathic Parkinson's disease (Paralysis Agitans), postencephalitic parkinsonism, symptomatic parkinsonism which may follow injury to the nervous system by carbon monoxide intoxication, and manganese intoxication. (source: Drug Bank)

ATC Therapeutic Category

  • N04BA:Dopa and dopa derivatives

Pharmacology, Interactions, and Contraindications

Mechanism Of Action

Striatal dopamine levels in symptomatic Parkinson's disease are decreased by 60 to 80%, striatal dopaminergic neurotransmission may be enhanced by exogenous supplementation of dopamine through administration of dopamine's precursor, levodopa. A small percentage of each levodopa dose crosses the blood-brain barrier and is decarboxylated to dopamine. This newly formed dopamine then is available to stimulate dopaminergic receptors, thus compensating for the depleted supply of endogenous dopamine. (source: Drug Bank)

Pharmacology

Levodopa (L-dopa) is used to replace dopamine lost in Parkinson's disease because dopamine itself cannot cross the blood-brain barrier where its precursor can. However, L-DOPA is converted to dopamine in the periphery as well as in the CNS, so it is administered with a peripheral DDC (dopamine decarboxylase) inhibitor such as carbidopa, without which 90% is metabolised in the gut wall, and with a COMT inhibitor if possible; this prevents about a 5% loss. The form given therapeutically is therefore a prodrug which avoids decarboxylation in the stomach and periphery, can cross the blood-brain barrier, and once in the brain is converted to the neurotransmitter dopamine by the enzyme aromatic-L-amino-acid decarboxylase. (source: Drug Bank)

Absorption, Distribution, Metabolism, Elimination & Toxicity

Biotransformation

95% of an administered oral dose of levodopa is pre-systemically decarboxylated to dopamine by the L-aromatic amino acid decarboxylase (AAAD) enzyme in the stomach, lumen of the intestine, kidney, and liver. Levodopa also may be methoxylated by the hepatic catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT) enzyme system to 3-O-methyldopa (3-OMD), which cannot be converted to central dopamine. (source: Drug Bank)

Protein Binding

High (source: Drug Bank)

Absorption

Levodopa is rapidly absorbed from the proximal small intestine by the large neutral amino acid (LNAA) transport carrier system. (source: Drug Bank)

Toxicity

Oral, mouse: LD<sub>50</sub> = 2363 mg/kg; Oral, rabbit: LD<sub>50</sub> = 609 mg/kg; Oral, rat: LD<sub>50</sub> = 1780 mg/kg. (source: Drug Bank)

Isomeric SMILES Code:

c1cc(c(cc1C[C@@H](C(=O)O)N)O)O (source: Drug Bank)

The following genes are in curated knowledge about this drug.

  Gene Relationship Evidence
Phenotype data available Genotype Data Available Literature annotations available Has annotations
COMT
  • CO
  •   
  • PK
  •   
  • GN
Publications
No phenotype data No genotype data Literature annotations available Not annotated
DBH
  •   
  •   
  •   
  • FA
  •   
Publications
No phenotype data No genotype data Literature annotations available Not annotated
DDC
  •   
  •   
  •   
  • FA
  •   
Publications
No phenotype data No genotype data Literature annotations available Has annotations
DRD2
  •   
  •   
  •   
  •   
  • GN
Publications
No phenotype data No genotype data Literature annotations available Not annotated
DRD3
  •   
  •   
  •   
  •   
  • GN
Publications
No phenotype data No genotype data Literature annotations available Not annotated
TH
  •   
  •   
  •   
  • FA
  •   
Publications

A list of non-curated publications that mention this drug along with other genes is available.

Drug Targets

Gene Description
COMT Uncurated Annotation (source: Drug Bank)
DRD1 Uncurated Annotation (source: Drug Bank)
DRD2 Uncurated Annotation (source: Drug Bank)
PAH Uncurated Annotation (source: Drug Bank)

A list of non-curated publications that mention this drug along with other drugs is available.

Curated Information

The following diseases are in curated knowledge about this drug.

  Disease Relationship Evidence
Phenotype data available Genotype Data Available Literature annotations available Not annotated
Parkinson Disease
  • CO
  •   
  • PK
  •   
  • GN
Publications
No phenotype data No genotype data Literature annotations available Not annotated
Parkinsonian Disorders
  •   
  •   
  •   
  • FA
  •   
Publications

Non-Curated Information

A list of non-curated publications that mention this drug along with other diseases is available.

LinkOuts

Web Resource:
Wikipedia
DrugBank:
DB01235
ChEBI ID:
15765
KEGG Compound ID:
C00355
KEGG Drug ID:
D00059
PubChem Compound ID:
6047
PubChem Substance ID:
7847127

Common Searches

Search PubMed
Search Medline Plus
Search PubChem
Search CTD

Non-Curated Publications

A list of non-curated publications that mention this drug is available.

PharmGKB integrates drug information from different sources: DrugBank, Open Eye Scientific Software.
Add New Alternate Name
Add New ATC Term
Add Cross Reference
Add a metabolite
Add a text annotation
Add a drug target
hint: enter a gene
    Add a drug interaction
    hint: enter a drug
    PharmGKB® is a registered trademark of HHS and is financially supported by NIH/NIGMS. It is managed at Stanford University (GM61374).
    ©2001-2010 PharmGKB.