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. 1988 Mar;50(3):790-802.
doi: 10.1111/j.1471-4159.1988.tb02983.x.

Evidence of glutamatergic denervation and possible abnormal metabolism in Alzheimer's disease

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Evidence of glutamatergic denervation and possible abnormal metabolism in Alzheimer's disease

A W Procter et al. J Neurochem. 1988 Mar.

Abstract

Excitatory dicarboxylic amino acids previously have been ascribed several functions in the brain. Here their total concentration and proposed neurochemical markers of neurotransmitter function have been measured in brain from patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) and controls. Specimens were obtained antemortem (biopsy) approximately 3 years after emergence of symptoms and promptly (less than 3 h) postmortem some 10 years after onset. Early in the disease a slight elevation in aspartic acid concentration of cerebral cortex was observed in the patients with AD. A reduction in glutamic acid concentration of a similar magnitude was found. It is argued that this, together with a decrease in CSF glutamine content and lack of change in the phosphate-activated brain glutaminase activity of tissue, reflects an early metabolic abnormality. Later in the disease evidence of glutamatergic neurone loss is provided by the finding that in many regions of the cerebral cortex the Na+-dependent uptake of D-[3H]aspartic acid was almost always lowest in AD subjects compared with control when assessed by a method designed to minimise artifacts and epiphenomena. Release of endogenous neurotransmitters from human brain tissue postmortem did not appear to have the characteristics of that from human tissue antemortem and rat brain.

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