Abstract

Previous studies showed that amitriptyline (AMI), a tricyclic antidepressant, inhibited neurite outgrowth from chick embryonic cerebral explants and inhibited adenylyl cyclase activity in cerebral membrane preparations. In the present study, we have investigated the possibility that AMI may have additional effects on cellular metabolism and signal transduction that underlie AMI-mediated inhibition of neurite outgrowth. In vitro, AMI inhibited phospholipase C in a dose- and GTP-dependent manner in membranes from 8-day-old chick forebrain. Brain homogenates from 8-day-old chick embryos, treated in vivo for 6 days with AMI (20 micrograms/g/day), showed significant reductions in (1) phosphorylation of two polypeptides (49 and 105 kD), and (2) levels of three polypeptides (43, 53, and 92 kD). Western blots showed that the 43- and 53-kD polypeptides corresponded to actin and tubulin, respectively. Diolein and dilinolein, potent activators of protein kinase C, stimulated neurite outgrowth and reversed the inhibitory effects of AMI. Sphingosine, a protein kinase C inhibitor, significantly inhibited neurite outgrowth and eliminated the stimulatory effects of diolein and dilinolein on neurite outgrowth. These data suggest that AMI-mediated inhibition of neurite outgrowth involves multiple effects on cellular metabolism and signal transduction. A hypothesis consistent with our data is that AMI interferes in some manner with the action of G proteins in the signal transduction cascade.

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