Regional differences in 5-hydroxytryptamine and catecholamine uptake in primary astrocyte cultures
- PMID: 3531407
- DOI: 10.1111/j.1471-4159.1986.tb00808.x
Regional differences in 5-hydroxytryptamine and catecholamine uptake in primary astrocyte cultures
Abstract
The uptake of 3H-labelled 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT, serotonin) norepinephrine ([3H]NE), and 3,4-dihydroxyphenylethylamine ([ 3H]dopamine, [3H]DA) was studied in primary astrocyte cultures prepared from the cerebral cortex, corpus striatum, and hippocampal regions of neonatal rat brain. Na+-dependent uptake showed marked regional differences. For [3H]5-HT the magnitude of uptake was corpus striatum greater than or equal to cerebral cortex greater than hippocampus, whereas for [3H]NE the order was hippocampus greater than corpus striatum greater than cerebral cortex. For [3H]DA, only the hippocampal cultures showed significant Na+-dependent uptake. [3H]5-HT uptake was specifically inhibited by 10(-7) M fluoxetine whereas [3H]NE uptake was preferentially inhibited by 10(-7) M desipramine. These results may reflect regional brain specialization and/or different developmental patterns of high affinity uptake of serotonin and catecholamines by astrocytes in situ.
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