Abstract

Heroin and morphine, in acute intraperitoneal doses of 2 and 10 mg/kg respectively, produced significant increments in the formation of newly formed brain serotonin from tritiated ( 3H)-L-tryptophan to 3H-serotonin. Opiate analgesia, Straub tail sign and catatonia, were observed during the increase in the synthesis of serotonin. The transport of radio-labelled tryptophan into the rat brain was not increased by the acute injection of the opiates, but brain levels of 3H-serotonin and of its main metabolite, 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid, were significantly elevated. These opiates do not interfere with the accumulation of serotonin or with the transport of its metabolite in serotonergic neurons after inhibition of monoamine oxidases with Pargyline. An increase in the activity of tryptophan hydroxylases was more pronounced in the forebrain than in the brain stem. Stimulation of newly synthesized serotonin is probably mediated by an increase in tryptophan hydroxylase activity and not by an increase in the transport of tryptophan into the brain.

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