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1.
Abstract: The K+-stimulated, Ca2+-dependent release of glutamate, aspartate, -γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA), alanine, taurine, and glycine was measured in slices of cerebella obtained from control, and granule cell-, granule cell plus stellate cell-, or climbing fiber-deficient cerebella of the rat. The 55 mm -K+-stimulated release of glutamate and GABA was 10-fold greater in the presence of Ca2+ than in its absence. The stimulated release of aspartate was 4-fold higher when Ca2+ was present in the bathing media, while the value for alanine was twice as high as the amount obtained in the absence of Ca2+. There was no stimulated release of either taurine or glycine from the cerebellar slices. Increasing the Mg2+ concentration to 16 HIM inhibited the K+-stimulated, Ca2+-dependent release of glutamate, GABA, aspartate, and alanine 85% or more. The K+-stimulated, Ca2+ dependent release of glutamate, aspartate, and alanine from x-irradiated cerebella deficient in granule cells was reduced to 50–57% of control value. Additional x-irradiation treatment, which further reduced the cerebellar granule cell population and also prevented the acquisition of stellate cells, decreased the release of glutamate by 77%, aspartate by 66%, alanine by 91%, and, in addition, decreased the release of GABA by 55%. The K+-stimulated, Ca2+-dependent release of glutamate, aspartate, GABA, and alanine was not changed in climbing fiber-deficient cerebella obtained from 3-acetylpyridine-treated rats. The data support a transmitter role for GABA and glutamate in the cerebellum, but do not support a similar function for either taurine or glycine. The data also suggest that alanine and aspartate may be co-released along with glutamate from granule cells.  相似文献   

2.
This study was performed to analyze the effects of the barbiturate thiopental on neuronal glutamate uptake, release and metabolism. Since barbiturates are known to bind to the GABA(A) receptor, some experiments were carried out in the presence of GABA. Cerebellar granule neurons were incubated for 2 h in medium containing 0.25 mM [U-(13)C]glutamate, 3 mM glucose, 50 microM GABA and 0.1 or 1 mM thiopental when indicated. When analyzing cell extracts, it was surprisingly found that in addition to glutamate, aspartate and glutathione, GABA was also labeled. In the medium, label was observed in glutamate, aspartate and lactate. Glutamate exhibited different labeling patterns, indicating metabolism in the tricarboxylic acid cycle, and subsequent release. A net uptake of [U-(13)C]glutamate and unlabeled glucose was seen under all conditions. The amounts of most metabolites synthesized from [U-(13)C]glutamate were unchanged in the presence of GABA with or without 0.1 mM thiopental. In the presence of 1 mM thiopental, regardless of the presence of GABA, decreased amounts of [1,2, 3-(13)C]glutamate and [U-(13)C]aspartate were found in the medium. In the cell extracts increased [U-(13)C]glutamate, [1,2, 3-(13)C]glutamate, labeled glutathione and [U-(13)C]aspartate were observed in the 1 mM thiopental groups. Glutamate efflux and uptake were studied using [(3)H]D-aspartate. While efflux was substantially reduced in the presence of 1 mM thiopental, this barbiturate only marginally inhibited uptake even at 3 mM. These results may suggest that the previously demonstrated neuroprotective action of thiopental could be related to its ability to reduce excessive glutamate outflow. Additionally, thiopental decreased the oxidative metabolism of [U-(13)C]glutamate but at the same time increased the detectable metabolites derived from the TCA cycle. These latter effects were also exerted by GABA.  相似文献   

3.
Neuroactive Amino Acids in Focally Epileptic Human Brain: A Review   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Studies of neuroactive amino acids and their regulatory enzymes in surgically excised focally epileptic human brain are reviewed. Concentrations of glutamate, aspartate and glycine are significantly increased in epileptogenic cerebral cortex. The activities of the enzymes, glutamate dehydrogenase and aspartate aminotransferase, involved in glutamate and aspartate metabolism are also increased. Polyamine synthesis is enhanced in epileptogenic cortex and may contribute to the activation of N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors. Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMRS) reveals that patients with poorly controlled complex partial seizures have a significant diminution in occipital lobe gamma aminobutyric acid (GABA) concentration. The activity of the enzyme GABA-aminotransaminase (GABA-T) which catalyzes GABA degredation is not altered in epileptogenic cortex. NMRS studies show that vigabatrin, a GABA-T inhibitor and effective antiepileptic, significantly increases brain GABA. Glutamate decarboxylase (GAD), responsible for GABA synthesis, is diminished in interneurons in discrete regions of epileptogenic cortex and hippocampus. In vivo microdialysis performed in epilepsy surgery patients provides measurements of extracellular amino acid levels during spontaneous seizures. Glutamate concentrations are higher in epileptic hippocampi and increase before seizure onset reaching potentially excitotoxic levels. Frontal or temporal cortical epileptogenic foci also release aspartate, glutamate and serine particularly during intense seizures or status epilepticus. GABA in contrast, exhibits a delayed and feeble rise in the epileptic hippocampus possibly due to a reduction in the number and/or efficiency of GABA transporters.  相似文献   

4.
Abstract: We have studied the effect of isonicotinic acid hydrazide (INH), a convulsant agent, on the extracellular levels of amino acids in the hippocampus, and the effect of sodium valproate (VPA) administration in INH-treated rats. INH (250 mg/kg) caused a rapid and sustained decrease in basal levels of GABA, and during this period convulsions of increasing severity were observed. Basal levels of glutamine, taurine, aspartate, and glutamate were unchanged by INH. When VPA was coadministered with INH, basal GABA levels were increased and no convulsions were observed. When transmitter release was evoked using 100 m M K+, the increase in dialysate GABA observed in INH-treated animals was less than that seen in controls and convulsions increased in frequency. K+-evoked release of glutamate and aspartate tended to be higher following INH treatment, and in the case of aspartate, this increase was significant. VPA reversed the changes in evoked release of glutamate and aspartate, and release of GABA was considerably greater than that seen in control or INH-treated rats. No drug effect on evoked changes in taurine or glutamine level was seen. These are the first data to show decreased extracellular GABA in conjunction with convulsions in freely moving animals in vivo.  相似文献   

5.
The effects of insulin-induced hypoglycemic stupor and subsequent treatment with glucose on mouse cerebral cortical, cerebellar and brain stem levels of glucose, glycogen, ATP, phosphocreatine, glutamate, aspartate and GABA and on cerebral cortical and cerebellar levels of cyclic AMP and cyclic GMP have been measured. Hypoglycemia decreased glucose, glycogen and glutamate levels and had no effect on ATP levels in all three regions of brain. GABA levels were decreased only in cerebellum. Aspartate levels rose in cerebral cortex and brain stem, and creatine phosphate increased in cerebral cortex and cerebellum. In the hypoglycemic stuporous animals, cyclic GMP levels were elevated in cerebral cortex and depressed in cerebellum whereas cyclic AMP levels were unchanged from control values. Intravenous administration of 2.5-3.5 mmol/kg of glucose to the hypoglycemic stuporous animals produced recovery of near normal neurological function within 45 s. Only brain glucose and aspartate levels returned to normal prior to behavioral recovery. These results suggest that of the several substances examined in this study, only glucose and perhaps aspartate have important roles in the biochemical mechanisms producing neurological abnormalities in hypoglycemic animals.  相似文献   

6.
100 mg of taurine per kg body weight had been administered intraperitoneally and 30 min after the administration the animals were sacrificed. Glutamate dehydrogenase, aspartate aminotransferase, alanine aminotransferase, glutaminase, glutamine synthetase, glutamate decarboxylase and GABA aminotransferase along with the content of glutamate and GABA in cerebral cortex, cerebellum and brain stem were studied and compared with the same obtained in the rats treated with normal saline in place of taurine. The results indicated a significant decrease in the activity of glutamate dehydrogenase in cerebral cortex and cerebellum and a significant increase in brain stem. Glutaminase and glutamine synthetase were found to increase significantly both in cerebral cortex and cerebellum. The activities of glutamate decarboxylase was found to increase in all the three regions along with a significant decrease in GABA aminotransferase while the content of glutamate showed a decrease in all the three brain regions, the content of GABA was observed to increase significantly. The above effects of taurine on the metabolism of glutamate and GABA are discussed in relation to the functional role of GABA and glutamate. The results indicate that taurine administration would result in a state of inhibition in brain.  相似文献   

7.
The effects of one intraperitoneal injection of 60–65 mg/kg of 3-acetylpyridine (3-AP) on the levels of aspartate, glutamate, GABA, taurine, glycine, and alanine in the cerebellum, medulla, telencephalon, and diencephalon-mesencephalon of the rat were studied at various times (4–28 days) after injection. In the first 4–7 days, the levels of glutamate, GABA, glycine, and alanine in the cerebellum were 10–30% higher in the 3-AP-treated rats than in the control animals. By day 14, the levels of these four amino acids were normal (in the case of glutamate and glycine) or below normal (for GABA and alanine). By day 21, the values for GABA and alanine returned to normal. In the first 7 days, the level of aspartate in the cerebellum was the same in both the 3-AP- and saline-injected groups. From days 14 to 28, the level of aspartate in the cerebellum was 10–20% lower in the 3-AP-injected group than in the saline-treated animals. The level of taurine in the cerebellum was 15–30% lower in the 3-AP group than in the control group from days 7 to 28. The pattern of changes observed in the medulla in the first 7 days was similar to that found in the cerebellum for this period. However, unlike the data for the cerebellum, the level of aspartate in the medulla was unchanged by the 3-AP injection from day 14 to day 28, and the level of glutamate in the medulla remained higher (10–15%) from days 14 to 28 in the 3-AP-injected animals with respect to control values. The levels of taurine in the medulla were lower (10–15%) from day 7 to day 28 in the 3-AP injected group with respect to control values. The injection of 3-AP did not alter the levels of aspartate, glutamate, GABA, taurine, glycine, or alanine in the telencephalon on days 7, 14, 21, or 28 and in the diencephalon-mesencephalon on day 21 with respect to control levels.  相似文献   

8.
The aim of this study was to compare the changes in amino acids (alanine, aspartate, GABA, glutamate, glutamine, glycine, serine taurine) that are produced in different regions of the neonate brain (telencephalon, diencephalon cerebellum, brain stem) following a survivable period of anoxia and after the re-establishment of air respiration. Anoxia provoked different responses in the different regions. The changes during the anoxic period were as follows. In the brain stem there was a decrease in aspartate, in the telencephalon there was a significant increase in GABA and alanine and a decrease in aspartate, in the diencephalon, glutamate and GABA increased, and in the cerebellum, glycine and alanine levels were enhanced. The changes during recovery were even more dissimilar. Here the greatest shifts were seen in the brain stem with increases in glutamine, GABA, aspartate, glycine, serine, alanine, and taurine. In the telencephalon glutamate fell and alanine increased, in the diencephalon GABA increased, and in the cerebellum, glutamate fell while glycine and alanine increased. In none of the major brain regions did the pattern of changes in neurotransmitters correspond to that seen in anoxic tolerant species.  相似文献   

9.
Glutamate and GABA are the major excitatory and inhibitory neurotransmitters in the CNS. In the retina, it has been shown that glutamate and aspartate and their agonists kainate and NMDA promote the release of GABA. In the chick retina, at embryonic day 14 (E14), glutamate and kainate were able to induce the release of GABA from amacrine and horizontal cells as detected by GABA-immunoreactivity. NMDA also induced GABA release restricted to amacrine cell population and its projections to the inner plexiform layer (E14 and E18). Although aspartate reduced GABA immunoreactivity, specifically in amacrine cells of E18 retinas, it was not efficient to promote GABA release from retinas at E14. As observed in differentiated retinas, dopamine inhibited the GABA release promoted by NMDA and aspartate but not by kainate. Our data show that different retinal sites respond to distinct EAAs via different receptor systems.  相似文献   

10.
The effects of aminooxyacetic acid (AOAA), a transaminase inhibitor, and 2-oxoglutarate, a precursor to glutamate by the activity of aspartate aminotransferase (AAT), on slices of rat medulla oblongata, cerebellum, cerebral cortex, and hippocampus were studied. The slices were superfused and electrically stimulated. There was a Ca2+-dependent stimulus-evoked release of endogenous glutamate, gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA), and beta-alanine in all regions examined. AOAA (10(-4) and 10(-3) M) decreased the release of glutamate in the medulla oblongata and cerebellum but not in the hippocampus. L-Canaline, a specific inhibitor of ornithine aminotransferase, did not affect the glutamate release in the medulla. 2-Oxoglutarate (10(-3) M) increased the release of glutamate in the medulla oblongata and cerebellum but not in the cerebral cortex and hippocampus. Treatment with AOAA (10(-4) M) almost abolished the activities of AAT in all regions studied. AOAA (10(-4) and 10(-3) M) increased the stimulus-evoked release of GABA in the cerebellum, cerebral cortex, and hippocampus, whereas the stimulus-evoked release of beta-alanine was decreased by this agent in all regions studied. These results suggest the participation of AAT in the synthesis of the transmitter glutamate in the medulla oblongata and cerebellum of the rat.  相似文献   

11.
M.A. Rea  W.J. McBride 《Life sciences》1978,23(24):2355-2359
The effect of the x-irradiation-induced loss of cerebellar granule and stellate cells on the levels of glutamate, aspartate and GABA in regions of the rat cerebellum was determined. The level of glutamate was significantly lower in the neuron-depleted cerebellar cortex while GABA levels were higher than control values in the cerebellar cortex and white matter of the x-irradiated rats. Aspartate levels were not changed by x-irradiation in any cerebellar region. The data is discussed in terms of the proposed role of glutamate as the excitatory neurotransmitter released from granule cells.  相似文献   

12.
Mouse cerebral cortical mini-slices were used in a superfusion system to monitor depolarization-induced (55 mM K+) release of preloaded [2,3-3H]GABA and to investigate the biosynthesis of glutamate, GABA and aspartate during physiological and depolarizing (55 mM K+) conditions from either [1,6-13C]glucose or [U-13C]glutamine. Depolarization-induced GABA release could be reduced (50%) by the GABA transport inhibitor tiagabine (25 μM) or by replacing Ca2+ with Co2+. In the presence of both tiagabine and Co2+ (1 mM), release was abolished completely. The release observed in the presence of 25 μM tiagabine thus represents vesicular release. Superfusion in the presence of [1,6-13C]glucose led to considerable labeling in the three amino acids, the labeling in glutamate and aspartate being increased after depolarization. This condition had no effect on GABA labeling. For all three amino acids, the distribution of label in the different carbon atoms revealed on increased tricarboxylic acid (TCA) activity during depolarization. When [U-13C]glutamine was used as substrate, labeling in glutamate was higher than that in GABA and aspartate and the fraction of glutamate and aspartate being synthesized by participation of the TCA cycle was increased by depolarization, an effect not seen for GABA. However, GABA synthesis reflected TCA cycle involvement to a much higher extent than for glutamate and aspartate. The results show that this preparation of brain tissue with intact cellular networks is well suited to study metabolism and release of neurotransmitter amino acids under conditions mimicking neural activity. Special issue article in honor of Dr. Ricardo Tapia.  相似文献   

13.
The aim of the present paper was to determine whether the release of glutamate from putative "glutamergic" terminals in the cerebellum is influenced by gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA). In a group of preliminary experiments, we present biochemical evidence in favour of a neurotransmitter role of glutamate in the cerebellum: (1) endogenous glutamate was released from depolarized cerebellar synaptosomal preparations in a Ca2+-dependent away; (2) [14C]glutamate was synthesized from [14C]glutamine in cerebellar synaptosomes, and the newly synthesized [14C]glutamate was released released in a Ca2+-dependent way; (3) the elevation of cyclic GMP elicited by depolarization of cerebellar slices in the presence of Ca2+ was partly reversed by the glutamate antagonist glutamic acid diethyl ester, which probably prevented the interaction of endogenously released glutamate with postsynaptic receptors. GABA and muscimol at low concentrations (2--20 micrometers) potentiated the depolarization-induced release of D-[3H]aspartate (a glutamate analogue which labels the glutamate "reuptake pool") from cerebellar synaptosomes. The effect was concentration dependent and was largely prevented by two GABA antagonists, bicuculline and picrotoxin. The stimulation of D-[3H]aspartate release evoked by muscimol was linearly related to the logarithm of K+ concentration in the depolarizing medium. GABA did not affect the overall release of endogenous glutamate, but potentiated, in a picrotoxin-sensitive manner, the depolarization-evoked release of [14C]glutamate previously synthesized from [14C]glutamine. Since nerve endings are the major site of glutamate synthesis from glutamine, GABA and muscimol appear to exert their stimulatory effect at the level of "glutamergic" nerve terminals, probably after interacting with presynaptic GABA receptors. The possible functional significance of these findings is briefly discussed.  相似文献   

14.
The actions of excitatory amino acids on the release of previously incorporated gamma-[3H]aminobutyric acid ([3H]GABA) were examined in purified (greater than 93%) striatal neurons derived from the fetal mouse brain and differentiated in primary culture. Glutamate, KCl, and veratrine evoked a dose-dependent, saturable, and reversible release of [3H]GABA from striatal neurons. Glutamate actions were not reduced in the absence of calcium, and were insensitive to tetrodotoxin. The dose-response relationships of excitatory amino acids demonstrated the following rank order of potency: glutamate greater than aspartate = N-methyl-D-aspartate greater than kainate much greater than quisqualate. Kainate, however, was the most effective agonist, evoking an eightfold increase over baseline levels of [3H]GABA release. Aspartate- and N-methyl-D-aspartate-evoked release was abolished in the presence of either 2-aminophosphonovaleric acid or gamma-D-glutamylglycine. Release due to glutamate and kainate was partially or ineffectively attenuated by these agents. Glutamate-, aspartate-, and N-methyl-D-aspartate-evoked GABA releases were augmented when calcium was omitted from the bathing medium and reduced when sodium was replaced with choline or lithium. Kainate-evoked release was unaffected when calcium was omitted, virtually unchanged when choline replaced sodium, and markedly potentiated when lithium was substituted for sodium. These findings suggest that at least two distinct receptor systems for excitatory amino acids mediate the evoked release of [3H]GABA from striatal neurons in primary culture. These two systems, aspartate/N-methyl-D-aspartate- and kainate-preferring, are distinguishable on the basis of their pharmacological and ionic properties.  相似文献   

15.
Glutamate receptor activation participates in mediation of neurotoxic effects in the striatum induced by the psychomotor stimulant amphetamine. The effects of the non-competitive NMDA receptor antagonist dizocilpine (MK-801) on amphetamine-induced toxicity and formation of nitric oxide (NO) in both striatum and cortex and on induced transmitter release in the nucleus accumbens were investigated. Repeated, systemic application of amphetamine elevated striatal and cortical lipid peroxidation and NO production. Moreover, amphetamine caused an immediate release of acetylcholine and aspartate and a delayed release of GABA in the nucleus accumbens. Surprisingly, glutamate release was not affected. Dizocilpine abolished the amphetamine-induced lipid peroxidation and NO production in striatum and cortex and diminished the elevation of neurotransmitter release. These findings suggest that amphetamine evokes neurotoxic effects in both striatal and cortical brain areas that are prevented by inhibiting NMDA receptor activation. The amphetamine-induced acetylcholine, aspartate and GABA release in the nucleus accumbens is also mediated through NMDA receptor-dependent mechanisms. Interestingly, the enhanced aspartate release might contribute to NMDA receptor activation in the nucleus accumbens, while glutamate does not seem to mediate amphetamine-evoked transmitter release in this striatal brain area.  相似文献   

16.
gamma-Aminobutyric acid (GABA) synthesis was studied in rat brain synaptosomes by measuring the increase of GABA level in the presence of the GABA-transaminase inhibitor gabaculine. The basal rate of synaptosomal GABA synthesis in glucose-containing medium (25.9 nmol/h/mg of protein) was only 3% of the maximal activity of glutamate decarboxylase (GAD; 804 +/- 83 nmol/h/mg of protein), a result indicating that synaptosomal GAD operates at only a small fraction of its catalytic capacity. Synaptosomal GABA synthesis was stimulated more than threefold by adding 500 microM glutamine. Glutamate also stimulated GABA synthesis, but the effect was smaller (1.5-fold). These results indicate that synaptosomal GAD is not saturated by endogenous levels of its substrate, glutamate, and account for part of the unused catalytic capacity. The greater stimulation of GABA synthesis by glutamine indicates that the GAD-containing compartment is more accessible to extrasynaptosomal glutamine than glutamate. The strong stimulation by glutamine also shows that the rates of uptake of glutamine and its conversion to glutamate can be sufficiently rapid to support GABA synthesis in nerve terminals. Synaptosomes carried out a slow net synthesis of aspartate in glucose-containing medium (7.7 nmol/h/mg of protein). Aspartate synthesis was strongly stimulated by glutamate and glutamine, but in this case the stimulation by glutamate was greater. Thus, the larger part of synaptosomal aspartate synthesis occurs in a different compartment than does GABA synthesis.  相似文献   

17.
The extracellular levels of aspartate, glutamate and GABA were measured by microdialysis, coupled with an HPLC method, in rat prefrontal cortex (mPFC) and ventral hippocampus (VH) before and during the performance of a step-down inhibitory task. The basal levels of glutamate were about 50% higher than those of aspartate, and GABA levels were about 20-folds smaller than those of the excitatory amino acids. There were no significant differences in the basal levels of any of the three amino acids between the two brain regions. The extracellular levels of aspartate increased during acquisition and recall trials in both VH and mPFC, whereas those of glutamate increased in the VH during acquisition only. A significant increase in GABA levels was also detected during acquisition but only in the mPFC. The neuronal origin of the increased extracellular levels of aspartate, glutamate and GABA was demonstrated by administering tetrodotoxin directly into the mPFC or VH by reverse dialysis. These findings, together with previous evidence from our and other laboratories, indicate a differential release of aspartate and glutamate from excitatory neurons during the performance of behavioral responses, and therefore, distinct roles for the two excitatory amino acids should be envisaged.  相似文献   

18.
To characterize the effect of glutamine on the release of glutamate, aspartate, and γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA), rat hippocampal slices were superfused with different concentrations of glutamine or Ca2+. Amino acids released and retained were analyzed by HPLC. Glutamine (0.5 mmol/L) increased more than threefold the release of glutamate evoked by 50 mmol/L K+ in the presence of 2.6 mmol/L Ca2+ without a corresponding increase in glutamate content, while the release of aspartate was increased less and that of GABA not at all by glutamine. The evoked release of all three amino acids, including the enhanced release of glutamate in the presence of glutamine, was strongly dependent on Ca2+ concentrations between 0.1 and 2.6 mmol/L. The potentiation of glutamate release by glutamine reached a plateau at 0.25 mmol/L glutamine. Intermittent electrical field stimulation increased the release of only glutamate and this release was nearly doubled by glutamine. The increased release was Ca2+ dependent and tetrodotoxin (TTX) sensitive. Results suggest that extracellular glutamine promotes primarily the formation of releasable glutamate and this enhancement is dependent on extracellular Ca2+.  相似文献   

19.
The effect of the glutamate antagonist alpha-amino-4-phosphonobutyrate (APBA) on the release of endogenous amino acids from sensorimotor cortical synaptosomes of rats with a cortical cobalt focus and from non-epileptic rats was studied: (1) The release of endogenous glutamate, aspartate, and gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) from synaptosomal preparations of cobalt-induced epileptogenic tissues was increased compared with the release from the contralateral (sensorimotor) region or the sensorimotor cortex of normal animals. The intrasynaptosomal content of these amino acids was reduced in proportion to the amount released. The levels of other amino acids were unaffected or showed much smaller changes. (2) APBA (0.5-1 mM) decreased significantly the spontaneous release of aspartate and glutamate from the epileptic foci without affecting GABA or any other amino acid. (3) APBA produced no effect whatsoever on the release of any amino acid from synaptosomal preparations of nonepileptic focus.  相似文献   

20.
This study was designed to shed more light onto the three different brainstem regions which are implicated in the pain pathway for the level of various excitatory and inhibitory neurotransmitters before and following neuronal stimulation. The in vivo microdialysis technique was used in awake, freely moving adult Sprague-Dawley rats. The neurotransmitters studied included aspartate, glutamate, GABA, glycine, and taurine. The three brainstem regions examined included the mid-brain periaqueductal gray (PAG), the medullary nucleus raphe magnus (NRM), and the spinal trigeminal nucleus (STN). Neuronal stimulation was achieved following the administration of the sodium channel activator veratridine. The highest baseline levels of glutamate (P < 0.0001), aspartate (P < 0.0001), GABA (P < 0.01), taurine (P < 0.0001), and glycine (P < 0.001) were seen in the NRM. On the other hand, the lowest baseline levels of glutamate, GABA, glycine, and taurine were found in the PAG, while that of aspartate was found in the STN. Following the administration of veratridine, the highest release of the above neurotransmitters except for the aspartate and glycine was found in the PAG where the level of glutamate increased by 1,310 ± 293% (P < 0.001), taurine by 1,008 ± 143% (P < 0.01), and GABA by 10,358 ± 1,920% (P < 0.0001) when comparison was performed among the three brainstem regions and in relation to the baseline levels. The highest release of aspartate was seen in the STN (2,357 ± 1,060%, P < 0.001), while no significant difference was associated with glycine. On the other hand, the lowest release of GABA and taurine was found in the STN (696 ± 91 and 305 ± 25%, respectively), and glutamate and aspartate in the NRM (558 ± 200 and 874 ± 315%, respectively). Our results indicate, and for the first time, that although some differences are seen in the baseline levels of the above neurotransmitters in the three regions studied, there are quite striking variations in the level of release of these neurotransmitters following neuronal stimulation in these regions. In our opinion this is the first study to describe the pain activation/modulation related changes of the excitatory and inhibitory amino acids profile of the three different brainstem areas.  相似文献   

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