Gonzales_1985_Brain.Res_345_350

Reference

Title : Receptor-mediated inositide hydrolysis is a neuronal response: comparison of primary neuronal and glial cultures - Gonzales_1985_Brain.Res_345_350
Author(s) : Gonzales RA , Feldstein JB , Crews FT , Raizada MK
Ref : Brain Research , 345 :350 , 1985
Abstract :

Cholinergic and adrenergic receptor-stimulated inositide hydrolysis was studied in neuronal and glial cells cultured from brains of 1-day-old Wistar-Kyoto rats. Incubation of the cells with [3H]inositol led to the incorporation of radioactivity specifically into inositol phospholipids. Labeling of the membrane lipids reached a maximum in 2-3 days. Receptor-stimulated breakdown of inositides was determined by following the accumulation of inositol phosphates after incubation of the labeled cells for 60 min with carbachol or norepinephrine in the presence of 10 mM lithium. Carbachol (1 mM) stimulated inositol phosphate production in neurons 30 times higher than that seen in glia. The response stimulated by norepinephrine (75 microM) was 6 times higher in neurons than glia. The response to carbachol was blocked by atropine, and the norepinephrine-induced response was inhibited by prazosin suggesting that the receptors mediating the responses were muscarinic and alpha 1-adrenergic, respectively. These results suggest that muscarinic cholinergic and alpha 1-adrenergic stimulated inositide hydrolysis is primarily a neuronal response and that this biochemical event may be important for transmembrane signaling which occurs during neurotransmission.

PubMedSearch : Gonzales_1985_Brain.Res_345_350
PubMedID: 2994846

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Citations formats

Gonzales RA, Feldstein JB, Crews FT, Raizada MK (1985)
Receptor-mediated inositide hydrolysis is a neuronal response: comparison of primary neuronal and glial cultures
Brain Research 345 :350

Gonzales RA, Feldstein JB, Crews FT, Raizada MK (1985)
Brain Research 345 :350