Abstract

We are interested in identifying the target cells for norepinephrine in cerebral cortex and in characterizing the effects of norepinephrine on these target cells. Norepinephrine inhibits the incorporation of tritiated glucose into glycogen in rat cerebral cortex in dissociated cell culture. To identify which cells store glycogen in these cultures we combined glycogen cytochemistry with glial flbrillary acidic protein immunocytochemistry. Using this technique we show that cytochemically detectable glycogen is restricted to a small subset of astrocytes as well as an unidentified cell type which does not contain glial fibrillary acidic protein.These results demonstrate that only a minority of astrocytes in cortical cultures accumulate glycogen. Therefore cortical astrocytes are differentiated with respect to glycogen accumulation, an important metabolic function. We do not know if glycogen accumulation in astrocytes is a constitutive or facultative property. In either case the subset of astrocytes which accumulates glycogen might be one of the major cellular targets for norepinephrine in cerebral cortex.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call