Decreased Uptake and Release of D-Aspartate in the Guinea Pig Spinal Cord After Partial Cordotomy |
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Authors: | S J Potashner P L Tran |
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Institution: | Department of Anatomy, University of Connecticut Health Center, Farmington, Connecticut, U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | This study attempts to determine if L-glutamate and/or L-aspartate may be transmitters of neural tracts descending from the brain to the spinal cord. The uptake and electrically evoked release of D-3H]aspartate, a putative marker for L-glutamate and L-aspartate, were measured in the cervical enlargement of the guinea pig spinal cord. These activities were compared using unlesioned animals and others with a lesion on the right side of the spinal cord. Partial cordotomy (segment C5) produced a heavy loss of descending fibers, a small loss of primary sensory fibers, and a depression of the uptake and the Ca2+ -dependent, electrically evoked release of D-aspartate ipsilateral and caudal to the lesion. Contralaterally, there was a moderate loss of corticospinal fibers, some loss of other descending axons, and a depression of D-aspartate release. Dorsal rhizotomy (segments C4-T1) produced a heavy loss of primary sensory fibers ipsilateral to the lesion. Ipsilaterally, but not contralaterally, the uptake and release of D-aspartate were depressed. Degeneration after partial cordotomy in combination with dorsal rhizotomy was assumed to be the sum of that produced by each lesion separately. This combined lesion depressed D-aspartate uptake ipsilaterally and depressed D-aspartate release on both sides of the cervical enlargement. None of the lesions altered the uptake and the evoked release of 3H]GABA. These findings support the hypothesis that the synaptic endings of one or more neural tracts descending from the brain to the spinal cord mediate the uptake and release of D-aspartate and, therefore, may use L-glutamate or L-aspartate as a transmitter. |
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Keywords: | Spinal cord Partial cordotomy D-[3H]Aspartate Uptake Release |
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