Abstract

Rats of the Maudsley nonreactive (MNRA) strain were found to contain higher levels of norepinephrine in heart, spleen, and hypothalamus than animals of the Maudsley reactive (MR) strain. Total adrenal catecholamines were also greater in nonreactive animals. There was a trend toward higher endogenous norepinephrine concentration in MR rats in brainstem and telencephalon, but this was not statistically significant. Turnover measurements calculated from the fall of norepinephrine at 1 and 4 hours after a single dose of levo-α-methylparatyrosine showed no significant strain differences in telencephalon or brainstem, but MNRA animals had a faster rate of norepinephrine decline in heart than had MR rats. Possibly indicative of a higher rate of norepinephrine metabolism, the percentage of 3H-non-catechol metabolites relative to total counts was higher in brainstem of MNRA rats 90 min after intraventricular injection of 3H-norepinephrine. However, the disagreement between this estimate of norepinephrine metabolism and that provided by the α-methyl-paratyrosine technique prevents a conclusive statement about norepinephrine metabolism in the two strains. The results are discussed in the light of the established differences in behavior between the strains as well as other work exploring relationships between catecholamine metabolism and emotionality.

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