Neurotransmission by Neurons That Use Serotonin, Noradrenaline, Glutamate, Glycine, and ??-Aminobutyric Acid in the Normal and Injured Spinal Cord
- 1 January 1997
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Neurosurgery
- Vol. 40 (1) , 168-177
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00006123-199701000-00037
Abstract
The science of neurotransmission in the normal and injured spinal cord has grown. This is a review of neurotransmission using serotonin, noradrenaline, glutamate, glycine, and gamma-aminobutyric acid. The literature on spinal cord neurotransmission and changes that occur with trauma are reviewed. Serotonergic and noradrenergic bulbospinal tracts influence interneurons and motor neurons via postsynaptic inhibition. Colocalization of serotonin and thyrotropin-releasing hormone occur in bulbospinal tracts, and reduction in uptake and thyrotropin-releasing hormone immunoreactivity quantitates the degree of injury in chronic spinal cord injury (SCI). Glutamate functions as an excitatory transmitter of some dorsal root afferent neurons and interneurons modulating nociceptive and motor neurons via at least five different receptors. Reactive synaptogenesis occurs after SCI, leading to an increase in the number of excitatory glutamatergic synapses below the level of SCI. gamma-Aminobutyric acid is an inhibitory transmitter of spinal interneurons that functions both pre- and postsynaptically. After SCI, a reduction occurs in the number of inhibitory synapses related to gamma-aminobutyric acid. Glycine is an inhibitory neurotransmitter that functions postsynaptically and also modulates the N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor. After SCI, a reduction in glycine adds to the loss of local inhibition below the SCI.Keywords
This publication has 83 references indexed in Scilit:
- Glycine: An important potential component of spinal shockNeurochemical Research, 1993
- Serotonergic and non-serotonergic raphe neurons projecting to the feline lumbar and cervical spinal cord: A quantitative horseradish peroxidase-immunocytochemical studyNeuroscience Letters, 1987
- The depolarization of feline ventral horn group Ia spinal afferent terminations by GABAExperimental Brain Research, 1982
- Increase in glutamate receptors following repetitive electrical stimulation in hippocampal slicesLife Sciences, 1980
- The excitant amino acids glutamic and aspartic acid as transmitter candidates in the vertebrate central nervous systemProgress in Neurobiology, 1978
- Neurochemical correlates of spasticityLife Sciences, 1976
- Ionic mechanisms associated with the depolarization by glutamate and aspartate on human and rat spinal neurones in tissue culturePflügers Archiv - European Journal of Physiology, 1976
- The synaptology and cytology of the Clarke cell in nucleus dorsalis of the cat: an electron microscopic studyJournal of Neurocytology, 1974
- The distribution of glycine in cat spinal cord and rootsLife Sciences, 1965
- The specificity of molecular processes involved in neural transmissionJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1965