6533b86dfe1ef96bd12ca219

RESEARCH PRODUCT

A homeostatic mechanism counteracting K+-evoked choline release in adult brain

Konrad LöffelholzClaudia DvorakOksana WeichelJochen KleinJudith Ruhr

subject

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyMicrodialysisMicrodialysisIn Vitro TechniquesHippocampusBiochemistryCholineCellular and Molecular Neurosciencechemistry.chemical_compoundInternal medicinePotassium Channel BlockersmedicineExtracellularAnimalsHomeostasisCholine4-AminopyridineRats WistarNeurotransmitterBrain ChemistrySynaptosomeMembrane potentialDose-Response Relationship DrugBrainBiological TransportDepolarizationHemicholinium 3RatsEndocrinologychemistryPotassiumExtracellular SpaceAcetylcholineSynaptosomesmedicine.drug

description

Choline (Ch) is an essential nutrient as the biosynthetic precursor of acetylcholine (ACh) and phospholipids. Under resting conditions, the intracellular accumulation of Ch (above 10-fold), which is positively charged, is governed by the membrane potential and follows the Nernst equation. Accordingly, in synaptosomes from adult rats during depolarization, we observed a linear relationship between release of free cytoplasmic Ch and KCl concentration (2.7-120 mm). The K(+) -evoked Ch release was Ca(2+) -independent and did not originate from ACh or phospholipid hydrolysis. In superfused brain slices of adult rats, however, a K(+) -induced Ch efflux was absent. Also, under in vivo conditions, 30-60 mm KCl failed to increase the extracellular Ch level as shown by microdialysis in adult rat hippocampus. On the contrary, in brain slices from 1-week-old rats, high K(+) as well as 4-aminopyridine evoked a marked Ch efflux in a concentration-dependent fashion. This phenomenon faded within 1 week. Hemicholinium-3 (HC-3, 1 and 10 microm), a blocker of cellular choline uptake, caused a marked efflux of choline from adult rat slices but no or significantly less release from immature slices. We conclude that depolarization of synaptic endings causes a Ca(2+) -independent release of free cytoplasmic Ch into the extracellular space. In adult rat brain, this elevation of Ch is counteracted by a homeostatic mechanism such as uptake into brain cells.

https://doi.org/10.1046/j.0022-3042.2001.00754.x