The concentrations of free choline in blood plasma from a peripheral artery and from the transverse sinus, in the CSF, and in total brain homogenate, have been measured in untreated rats and in rats after acute intraperitoneal administration of choline chloride. In untreated rats, the arteriovenous difference of brain choline was related to the arterial choline level. At low arterial blood levels (less than 10 microM) as observed under fasting conditions, the arteriovenous difference was negative (about -2 microM), indicating a net release of choline from the brain of about 1.6 nmol/g/min. In rats with spontaneously high arterial blood levels (greater than 15 microM), the arteriovenous difference was positive, implying a marked net uptake of choline by the brain (3.1 nmol/g/min). The CSF choline concentration, which reflects changes in the extracellular choline concentration, also increased with increasing plasma levels and closely paralleled the gradually rising net uptake. Acute administration of 6, 20, or 60 mg of choline chloride/kg caused, in a dose-dependent manner, a sharp rise of the arterial blood levels and the CSF choline, and reversed the arteriovenous difference of choline to markedly positive values. The total free choline in the brain rose only initially and to a quantitatively negligible extent. Thus, the amount of choline taken up by the brain within 30 min was stored almost completely in a metabolized form and was sufficient to sustain the release of choline from the brain as long as the plasma level remained low. We conclude that the extracellular choline concentration of the brain closely parallels fluctuations in the plasma level of choline.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
The present study is concerned with the uptake and metabolism of choline by the rat brain. Intraperitoneal administration of choline chloride (4-60 mg/kg) caused a dose-dependent elevation of the plasma choline concentration from 11.8 to up to 165.2 microM within 10 min and the reversal of the negative arteriovenous difference (AVD) of choline across the brain to positive values at plasma choline levels of greater than 23 microM. Net choline release and uptake were linearly dependent on the plasma choline level in the physiological range of 10-50 microM, whereas the CSF choline level was significantly increased only at plasma choline levels of greater than 50 microM. The bolus injection of 60 mg/kg of [3H]choline chloride caused the net uptake of greater than 500 nmol/g of choline by the brain as calculated from the AVD, which was reflected in a minor increase of free choline level and a long-lasting increase of brain phosphorylcholine content, which paralleled the uptake curve. Loss of label from phosphorylcholine 30 min to 24 h after choline administration was accompanied by an increase of label in phosphatidylcholine, an indication of a delayed transfer of newly taken-up choline into membrane choline pools. In conclusion, homeostasis of brain choline is maintained by a complex system that interrelates choline net movements into and out of the brain and choline incorporation into and release from phospholipids.
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