Abstract

Reductions in cortical somatostatin (SRIH) and choline acetyl-transferase (ChAT) are major biochemical deficits in Alzheimer disease (AD). SRIH and ChAT were measured in fetal rat cerebral neurons after exposure to the glutamate agonists N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA), kainate (KA), and quisqualate (Q). NMDA (96 h incubation) stimulated SRIH release and content in a dose-dependent manner with a Bmax of 10(-5)M and EC50 of 2-3 x 10(-6)M. KA showed a small stimulation in SRIH levels at 10(-5)M, but produced marked inhibition at 10(-4)M. Q decreased both intracellular and secreted SRIH. KA (51-76% of basal) and Q (27-56% of basal) but not NMDA (91-114% of basal) also inhibited the incorporation of [35S]methionine into proteins. In similar experiments 10(-4)M Q (23 +/- 9% of basal) and KA (20 +/- 3% of basal) but not NMDA (80 +/- 16% of basal) reduced ChAT levels in hypothalamic/septal cultures. These inhibitory actions on ChAT activity by KA and Q were reversed by gamma-glutamyltaurine (GT) but not by 2-amino-5-phosphonopentanoic acid (AP5). Chronic NMDA exposure partially inhibited muscarinic acetylcholine receptor (mAChR) mediated inositol phospholipid (PI) turnover, whereas it was abolished after KA and Q pretreatment. These findings suggest that in cerebral cell cultures, NMDA has a stimulatory action on somatostatinergic neurons and non-NMDA receptor agonism could play an important role in EAA-mediated neural damage.

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