In Vivo Studies on the Extracellular, and Veratrine‐Releasable, Pools of Endogenous Amino Acids in the Rat Striatum: Effects of Corticostriatal Deafferentation and Kainic Acid Lesion
- 1 March 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Neurochemistry
- Vol. 48 (3) , 713-721
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1471-4159.1987.tb05575.x
Abstract
The effects of corticostriatal deafferentation (decortication) and destruction of intrinsic neurons (intrastriatal kainate injection) on the extracellular concentration, and veratrine-releasable pools, of endogenous amino acids in the rat striatum were examined using the in vivo brain dialysis technique. Intracellular amino acid content was also determined. Decortication reduced selectively intra- and extracellular levels of glutamate (Glu) and aspartate (Asp). Extracellular changes were more pronounced than those in tissue content. .gamma.-Aminobutyric acid (GABA), taurine (Tau), and phosphoethanolamine (PEA) levels were not affected, whereas nonneuroactive amino acids were increased at 1 week but not at 1 month post-lesion. The intracellular pool of Glu and Asp was also reduced in kainate-lesioned striata. However, extracellular levels of these compounds were not affected significantly by this treatment. The tissue content of all other amino acids was decreased, the most prominent change being in the concentration of GABA. Extracellular GABA concentration was also reduced dramatically, whereas the concentrations of nonneuroactive amino acids were increased to varying degrees. These data suggest that transmitter pools of neuroactive amino acids are an important supply for their extracellular pools. Lesion-induced alterations in nonneuroactive amino acids are discussed with regard to the loss of metabolic pools, glial reactivity, and changes in blood-brain barrier transport. Veratrine induced a massive release of neuroactive amino acids such as Glu, Asp, GABA, and Tau into the extracellular fluid, and a delayed increase in PEA. Extracellular levels of neuroactive amino acids were raised slightly. Decortication reduced, selectively, the amounts of Glu and Asp released by veratrine. GABA, Tau, and PEA effluxes were also decreased in kainate-lesioned striata. These findings are consistent with the proposed roles of an acidic amino acid as the corticostriatal transmitter, and of GABA as a transmitter in intrinsic striatal neurons. The existence of releasable pools of Tau and PEA with kainate-sensitive striatal neurons would also appear to be likely.Keywords
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