A new phosphorescence imaging method (Rumsey et al. Science Wash. DC 241: 1649-1651, 1988) has been used to continuously monitor the PO2 in the blood of the cerebral cortex of newborn pigs. A window was prepared in the skull and the brain superfused with artificial cerebrospinal fluid. The phosphorescent probe for PO2, Pd-meso-tetra(4-carboxyphenyl)porphine, was injected directly into the systemic blood. The phosphorescence of the probe was imaged, and the lifetimes were measured using flash illumination and a gated video camera. The PO2 in the blood of the veins and capillary beds of the cortex was calculated from the lifetimes. Systemic blood pressure was continuously monitored while the systemic arterial PCO2, PO2, and blood pH were measured periodically. The PO2 in the blood was quantitated for 60- to 200 microns2 regions within the image (from a total field of approximately 3 mm diam). The PO2 in the microvasculature was not uniform across the viewing field but increased or decreased in each region independently of the other regions. Thus at any point in time the PO2 in a region could be substantially above or below the average value. During hyperventilation, which lowered arterial PCO2 and increased pH of the blood, the average PO2 decreased in proportion to the decrease in arterial PCO2. For example, hyperventilation, which decreased arterial PCO2 from its normal value of 40 Torr to 10 Torr, caused a rapid (within 5 min) decrease in PO2 in the blood of capillaries and veins to approximately one-third of normal.
Synaptosomes isolated from the rat cerebral cortex by means of a discontinuous Ficoll gradient carry out net, sodium-dependent, veratridine-sensitive accumulation of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA), serotonin, norepinephrine, and dopamine. The intrasynaptosomal contents of the four neurotransmitters are: 30.4 nmol/mg protein, 17.4 pmol/mg protein, 13.5 pmol/mg protein, and 21.2 pmol/mg protein, respectively. Anaerobic preincubation of synaptosomes causes an irreversible decrease in the rates of neurotransmitter accumulation but does not affect the rates of their release. The inhibitory effect of anaerobiosis is enhanced by increased concentration of [H+] (decreased pH) in the medium. The most sensitive is the uptake of dopamine, the least that of serotonin. The rates of neurotransmitter efflux are unaffected by anaerobiosis. Synaptosomes leak catecholamines, GABA, and serotonin into the medium when subjected to anaerobiosis, and reintroduction of oxygen is accompanied by a rapid reaccumulation of all four neurotransmitters. It is concluded that: (1) Responses of synaptosomes to anaerobiosis are remarkably similar to the behavior of intact brain in hypoxia and ischemia. (2) Neurotransmitter uptake systems are more sensitive to short periods of anaerobiosis than either the energy metabolism or ion transport. (3) Some neurotransmitter uptake systems are more easily damaged by anaerobiosis than others.
The effects of kainic acid were investigated in preparations of rat brain synaptosomes. It was found that kainic acid inhibited competitively the uptake of D-[3H]aspartate, with a Ki of approximately 0.3 mM. Kainic acid also caused release of two excitatory amino acid neurotransmitters, aspartate and glutamate, in a time- and concentration-dependent manner, but had no effect on the content of gamma-aminobutyric acid. Concomitant with the release of aspartate and glutamate, depolarization of the synaptosomal membrane and an increase in intracellular calcium were observed, with no measurable change in the concentration of internal sodium ions. The increase in intrasynaptosomal calcium and decrease in transmembrane electrical potential were prevented by the addition of glutamate, whereas the kainate-induced release of radioactive aspartate was substantially inhibited by lowering the concentration of calcium in the external medium. It is postulated that kainic acid reacts with a class of glutamate receptors located in a subpopulation of synaptosomes, presumably derived from the glutamatergic and aspartatergic neuronal pathways, which possesses high-affinity uptake system(s) for glutamate and/or aspartate. Activation of these receptors causes opening of calcium channels, influx of calcium into the synaptosomes, and depolarization of the synaptosomal plasma membrane with consequent release of amino acid neurotransmitters.
The present studies describes the relationship between extracellular dopamine in striatum of newborn piglets and cortical oxygen pressure. The extracellular level of dopamine was measured by in vivo microdialysis and the oxygen pressure in the cortex was measured by phosphorescence lifetime of oxygen probe in the blood. Controlled, graded levels of hypoxic insult to the brain of animals were generated by decreasing of the oxygen fraction in the inspired gas (FiO2) from 21% to 14%, 11%, and 9%. This resulted in decrease in the cortical oxygen pressure from 31-35 Torr to about 24 Torr, 15 Torr and 4 Torr, respectively. The changes in extracellular level of dopamine, DOPAC and HVA were dependent on changes in cortical oxygen pressure. Stepwise decrease in the cortical oxygen pressure (see above) caused increases in extracellular dopamine of about 80%, 200% and 550%, respectively. The levels of DOPAC and HVA progressively decreased and when cortical oxygen decreased to 4-6 Torr were about 50% and 70% of control, respectively. After return of FiO2 to control (21%), the cortical oxygen pressure rapidly increased to above normal, then returned to control values. The extracellular levels of dopamine, DOPAC, and HVA recovered more slowly, attaining control values in about 30 minutes. The data show that extracellular levels of dopamine increase with even very small decreases in oxygen pressure. Thus, there is no "oxygen reserve" which protects dopamine release and metabolism from decrease in oxygen pressure.
Rat brain synaptosomes exhibit calcium-dependent transglutaminase activity. This activity, measured in detergent-treated or sonicated preparations, was six- to sevenfold lower than that in the liver. The synaptosomal transglutaminase was inhibited by various amines and alpha-difluoromethylornithine, compounds known to inhibit activity of this enzyme in other tissues. The inhibitors of transglutaminase induced release of catecholamines, but not of gamma-aminobutyric acid, from synaptosomes both under basal and K+-stimulated conditions. The concentrations of the agents that caused stimulation of catecholamine release were approximately the same as those that inhibited the activity of transglutaminase. Stimulation of release was largely reduced by the withdrawal of calcium from the incubation medium. Inhibitors of transglutaminase had little effect either on the uptakes of neurotransmitters or the amounts of deaminated products of catecholamine degradation released into the medium. It is suggested that a synaptosomal transglutaminase is involved in suppressing vesicular release of catecholamines by resting (nondepolarized) neurons and that this action may also be a part of negative feedback control which prevents excessive transmitter release at the synapse during increased neuronal activity.
In a piglet model, regional low-flow perfusion at 20 mL/(kg x min) resulted in lower cortical tissue oxygenation but better recovery than did perfusion at 40 mL/(kg x min). Neither flow rate adequately oxygenated organs in the lower torso.
The effect of graded levels of tissue hypoxia on the extracellular levels of dopamine, 3,4-dihydroxyphenylacetic acid, homovanillic acid, and 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid has been monitored in vivo by microdialysis. Reproducible levels of decreased oxygen in the brain were obtained by increasing the rate of ventilation from the control value of 25/min to as high as 95/min. With increasing ventilatory rate, the oxygen pressure in the cortex decreased from approximately 40 torr to 16 torr. As the oxygen pressure decreased stepwise from 40 to 27, 22, and 16 torr, the dopamine levels in the extracellular medium rose by 70, 90, and 150%, respectively, returning to baseline within a few minutes of return to control ventilation rates. Levels of the catabolic products 3,4-dihydroxyphenylacetic acid, homovanillic acid, and 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid decreased with decreasing tissue oxygen. Unlike the dopamine levels, these catabolite levels continued to decrease through 30 min of recovery (to 50% of control), returning to baseline only after recovery periods of 1-2 h. These data suggest that hypoxia induces long-term alterations in the neurotransmitter turnover. The marked effects of mild tissue hypoxia (decrease of oxygen from 40 torr to 26 torr) on both the extracellular dopamine concentration and dopamine metabolism indicate that the metabolic consequences of decreased tissue oxygen pressure extend to higher values than generally appreciated.
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