Abstract
Various extracts of brain were prepared with dilute and concentrated acid, acetone and n-butanol. When the extracts were applied to the guinea-pig isolated ileum, they produced a slow contraction which was not prevented by an antihistamine; in addition, the acid and acetone extracts inhibited the action of histamine. Histamine in extracts of brain was separated from other pharmacologically active substances by chromatography on a carboxylic-acid resin and estimated biologically. The bulk of this histamine was found in small particulate material, whereas slow-reacting substance was found in particulate material of greater density. 5-Hydroxytryptamine was in both the small and large particles. There was no relationship between the distribution of these substances and that of succinic dehydrogenase activity. The measurement of histamine in brain both by biological assay on the guinea-pig ileum and by chemical assay using a fluorimetric procedure gave mean values of 53 and 246 ng/g of wet tissue, respectively. The high values obtained by the chemical assay are attributable in part to substances other than histamine which become fluorescent after reaction with o-phthalaldehyde in this procedure.