Abstract

The present study was carried out in order to compare the effects of administration of organic (methylmercury, MeHg) and inorganic (mercury chloride, HgCl 2 ) forms of mercury on in vivo dopamine (DA) release from rat striatum. Experiments were performed in conscious and freely moving female adult Sprague-Dawley (230-280 g) rats using brain microdialysis coupled to HPLC with electrochemical detection. Perfusion of different concentrations of MeHg or HgCl 2 (2 microL/min for 1 h, N = 5-7/group) into the striatum produced significant increases in the levels of DA. Infusion of 40 microM, 400 microM, or 4 mM MeHg increased DA levels to 907 +/- 31, 2324 +/- 156, and 9032 +/- 70% of basal levels, respectively. The same concentrations of HgCl 2 increased DA levels to 1240 +/- 66, 2500 +/- 424, and 2658 +/- 337% of basal levels, respectively. These increases were associated with significant decreases in levels of dihydroxyphenylacetic acid and homovallinic acid. Intrastriatal administration of MeHg induced a sharp concentration-dependent increase in DA levels with a peak 30 min after injection, whereas HgCl 2 induced a gradual, lower (for 4 mM) and delayed increase in DA levels (75 min after the beginning of perfusion). Comparing the neurochemical profile of the two mercury derivatives to induce increases in DA levels, we observed that the time-course of these increases induced by both mercurials was different and the effect produced by HgCl 2 was not concentration-dependent (the effect was the same for the concentrations of 400 microM and 4 mM HgCl 2 ). These results indicate that HgCl 2 produces increases in extracellular DA levels by a mechanism differing from that of MeHg.

Highlights

  • Mercury is a global pollutant considered to be a persistent bioaccumulative and toxic chemical

  • The present study was carried out in order to compare the effects of administration of organic and inorganic forms of mercury on in vivo dopamine (DA) release from rat striatum

  • Experiments were performed in conscious and freely moving female adult Sprague-Dawley (230-280 g) rats using brain microdialysis coupled to HPLC with electrochemical detection

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Mercury is a global pollutant considered to be a persistent bioaccumulative and toxic chemical. Perfusion of different concentrations of MeHg or HgCl2 (2 μL/min for 1 h, N = 5-7/group) into the striatum produced significant increases in the levels of DA.

Results
Conclusion
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