Abstract
The spontaneous and potassium-stimulated release of endogenous taurine and .gamma.-aminobutyric acid (GABA) from cerebral cortex and cerebellum slices from adult and developing mice was studied in a superfusion system. The spontaneous release of GABA was of the same magnitude in slices from adult and developing mice, but the spontaneous release of taurine was considerably greater in the adults. The potassium-stimulated release of GABA from cerebral cortex slices was about five times greater in adult than in 3-day-old mice, but the potassium-stimulated release of taurine was more than six times greater in 3-day-old than in adult mice. In cerebellar slices from 7-day-old mice, potassium stimulation also evoked a massive release of taurine, whereas the evoked release from slices from adult mice was rather negligible. Also in cerebellar slices the potassium-stimulated release of GABA exhibited the opposite quantitative pattern. The stimulated release of both GABA and taurine was partially calcium dependent. The results suggest that taurine may be an important regulator of excitability in the developing brain.