Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Glutamate Peripherally Administered Exerts Somatostatin‐Releasing Action in the Conscious Rat

View through CrossRef
AbstractThis study was designed to determine whether glutamate is able to stimulate somatostatin release from in vivo conscious animals when somatostatin release is monitored in unanaesthetized rats stereotaxically implanted with a push‐pull cannula in the median eminence. One week after implantation, the median eminence was perfused with artificial cerebrospinal fluid alone or with the addition of either CGS 19755, an N‐methyl‐D‐aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonist (1(10−6 M), or glutamate (10−5 M). The latter (which is able to cross the brain‐blood barrier at large doses) was also peripherally administered (1 g/kg ip). Median eminence perfusate samples were collected every 15 min and somatostatin was measured by a sensitive radioimmunoassay.In rats receiving ip glutamate injection, somatostatin release from the median eminence was significantly increased (73.3±10.4 versus 24.8 ± 6.2; P < 0.01; n = 5) when compared to baseline levels measured in the same animals, but no effect was observed when local perfusion of the median eminence with glutamate (10−4 to 10−5 M; n = 6) was performed. Glutamate‐induced somatostatin release was completely blunted (n = 5) by prior local administration of CGS 19755 (10−5 M), a potent NMDA‐type receptor antagonist able to cross the blood‐brain barrier. In contrast, administration of glutamic acid diethylester, a competitive antagonist of non‐NMDA receptors, at doses of 10−4 M (n = 4), was not able to alter this response.Our results are the first in vivo evidence in favour of a neuroendocrine role for glutamate on somatostatin release whose site of action seems to exclude the median eminence.
Title: Glutamate Peripherally Administered Exerts Somatostatin‐Releasing Action in the Conscious Rat
Description:
AbstractThis study was designed to determine whether glutamate is able to stimulate somatostatin release from in vivo conscious animals when somatostatin release is monitored in unanaesthetized rats stereotaxically implanted with a push‐pull cannula in the median eminence.
One week after implantation, the median eminence was perfused with artificial cerebrospinal fluid alone or with the addition of either CGS 19755, an N‐methyl‐D‐aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonist (1(10−6 M), or glutamate (10−5 M).
The latter (which is able to cross the brain‐blood barrier at large doses) was also peripherally administered (1 g/kg ip).
Median eminence perfusate samples were collected every 15 min and somatostatin was measured by a sensitive radioimmunoassay.
In rats receiving ip glutamate injection, somatostatin release from the median eminence was significantly increased (73.
3±10.
4 versus 24.
8 ± 6.
2; P < 0.
01; n = 5) when compared to baseline levels measured in the same animals, but no effect was observed when local perfusion of the median eminence with glutamate (10−4 to 10−5 M; n = 6) was performed.
Glutamate‐induced somatostatin release was completely blunted (n = 5) by prior local administration of CGS 19755 (10−5 M), a potent NMDA‐type receptor antagonist able to cross the blood‐brain barrier.
In contrast, administration of glutamic acid diethylester, a competitive antagonist of non‐NMDA receptors, at doses of 10−4 M (n = 4), was not able to alter this response.
Our results are the first in vivo evidence in favour of a neuroendocrine role for glutamate on somatostatin release whose site of action seems to exclude the median eminence.

Related Results

PROCEEDINGS OF THE AUSTRALASIAN SOCIETY OF CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL PHARMACOLOGISTS
PROCEEDINGS OF THE AUSTRALASIAN SOCIETY OF CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL PHARMACOLOGISTS
1.Effect of chronic haloperidol treatment on D‐2 receptors labelled by (3H)‐spiperone in homogenates of rat corpus striatum. A. L. Gundlach, D. J. de Vries and P. M. Beart2.The eff...
Functional Impact of nTS Glutamate Stress on Respiration in an Alzheimer’s Disease Model
Functional Impact of nTS Glutamate Stress on Respiration in an Alzheimer’s Disease Model
Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is closely associated with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). Such hypoxic insults trigger glutamate release of chemoafferents into the nucleus tractus solitar...
Acute stress and dexamethasone rapidly increase hippocampal somatostatin synthesis and release from the dentate gyrus hilus
Acute stress and dexamethasone rapidly increase hippocampal somatostatin synthesis and release from the dentate gyrus hilus
AbstractSomatostatin is a neuropeptide whose facilitatory action in the generation of long‐term potentiation (LTP) in the hippocampal dentate gyrus has been associated with memory ...
PROCEEDINGS OF THE AUSTRALASIAN SOCIETY OF CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL PHARMACOLOGISTS
PROCEEDINGS OF THE AUSTRALASIAN SOCIETY OF CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL PHARMACOLOGISTS
14th Annual Meeting, December 1980, Canberra1. Effect of dexamethasone on pineal β‐adrenoceptors. C. A. Maxwell, A. Foldes, N. T. Hinks and R. M. Hoskinson2. A clinicopathological ...
Increased PINK1 Confers a Neuroprotective Role After Glutamate Excitotoxicity in Neuronal Cells
Increased PINK1 Confers a Neuroprotective Role After Glutamate Excitotoxicity in Neuronal Cells
Abstract Background: Ischemic insults often leads to mitochondrial dysfunction and neuronal injury. The neuronal damage induced by ischemia can be partly attributed to glut...
PROCEEDINGS OF THE AUSTRALASIAN SOCIETY OF CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL PHARMACOLOGISTS
PROCEEDINGS OF THE AUSTRALASIAN SOCIETY OF CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL PHARMACOLOGISTS
10th Annual Meeting, 25‐26 November 1976, Adelaide 1. Histamine metabolism in aortae of two histamine sensitive species. A. Foldes, M. J. Stacey and I. S. de la Lande 2. Localizat...
Bidirectional dysregulation of synaptic glutamate signaling after transient metabolic failure
Bidirectional dysregulation of synaptic glutamate signaling after transient metabolic failure
Abstract Ischemia leads to a severe dysregulation of glutamate homeostasis and excitotoxic cell damage in the brain. Shorter episodes of energy depletion, for instance during peri-...
Bidirectional dysregulation of synaptic glutamate signaling after transient metabolic failure
Bidirectional dysregulation of synaptic glutamate signaling after transient metabolic failure
Ischemia leads to a severe dysregulation of glutamate homeostasis and excitotoxic cell damage in the brain. Shorter episodes of energy depletion, for instance during peri-infarct d...

Back to Top