Premium
DEVELOPMENT OF THE UPTAKE AND STORAGE OF L‐[ 3 H]NOREPINEPHRINE IN THE RAT BRAIN
Author(s) -
Coyle J. T.,
Axelrod J.
Publication year - 1971
Publication title -
journal of neurochemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.75
H-Index - 229
eISSN - 1471-4159
pISSN - 0022-3042
DOI - 10.1111/j.1471-4159.1971.tb05065.x
Subject(s) - desipramine , norepinephrine , reserpine , medicine , endocrinology , gestation , endogeny , tritium , chemistry , catecholamine , dopamine , biology , pregnancy , hippocampus , genetics , physics , antidepressant , nuclear physics
The uptake and storage of L‐[ 3 H]norepinephrine at various stages of development was examined in homogenates of rat brain. For the adult animal, active uptake accounted for 80 per cent of the total uptake. At 14 days of gestation, no active uptake was demonstrable At 18 days of gestation, saturable uptake of L‐[ 3 H]norepinephrine with a K m of 3 × 10 −7 m was first demonstrable; the K m value did not vary during subsequent development. The V max . of uptake increased five‐fold between 18 days of gestation and 28 days postnatally, at which stage it was the same as the adult value. The development of saturable uptake paralleled but preceded the increase in endogenous norepinephrine. When homogenates were incubated with l ‐[ 3 H]norepinephrine and subjected to centrifugation on linear sucrose gradients, there was a peak of tritium in the synaptosomal fractions; the magnitude of the peak increased with maturation of the brain. The increase in the peak of tritium paralleled the increase in particulate LDH activity and was distinct from the peak of MAO activity. Desipramine, a compound that blocks the initial uptake of norepinephrine, first exhibited inhibition of uptake at 19 days of gestation; the degree of inhibition did not vary during subsequent development. In contrast, reserpine, a compound which inhibits the intra‐neuronal storage of norepinephrine, exhibited a progressive increase of inhibition with maturation of the brain at and subsequent to 19 days of gestation.