Abstract

Slices of rat brain cortex preincubated with 3H-5-hydroxytryptamine were superfused with physiological salt solution and stimulated electrically, or they were superfused with Ca2+-free solution containing 25 mM K+ and stimulated by introduction of 1.3 mM CaCl2 for 2 min. 1. The electrically evoked 3H overflow was decreased by noradrenaline and increased by phentolamine in a concentration-dependent manner. 2. Phentolamine caused a parallel shift to the right of the concentration-response curve of noradrenaline for its inhibitory effect on impulse-evoked 3H overflow; by contrast, it left the inhibitory effect of unlabelled 5-hydroxytryptamine on the electrically evoked 3H overflow unaffected. 3. Propranolol did not alter the inhibitory effect of noradrenaline on impulse-induced 3H overflow. 4. The increasing effect of phentolamine on the electrically evoked 3H overflow was not modified by paroxetine. 5. Cocaine (at a concentration which almost completely blocks the uptake of 3H-noradrenaline but only partially that of 3H-5-hydroxytryptamine into cortex slices) decreased impulse-evoked 3H overflow. This effect was abolished by phentolamine. 6. In the presence of tetrodotoxin throughout superfusion, the Ca2+-evoked 3H-overflow from slices superfused with Ca2+-free solution was inhibited by noradrenaline and increased by phentolamine. These findings suggest that the terminal serotoninergic fibers of rat brain cortex possess alpha-adrenoceptors, activation of which by exogenous or endogenous noradrenaline leads to inhibition of the release of 5-hydroxytryptamine.

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