Abstract
Abstract—The activities of glutamine synthetase, glutaminase, glutamate decarboxylase, GABA aminotransferase, glutamate dehydrogenase, and aspartate aminotransferase were measured in four areas of the cat spinal cord and in dorsal and ventral roots. Five of the six enzymes showed identical distribution patterns; i.e. the activities in the dorsal and ventral gray matter were equal and those of dorsal and ventral white matter were equal. No statistical differences in the mean enzyme activities in the dorsal and ventral roots were found. Glutamate decarboxylase was the only enzyme which had a different pattern. The enzyme activity in dorsal gray was twice that of ventral gray; the same pattern as the GABA concentration in both these areas. The glutamine synthetase activities in the cord areas and roots correlated with the glutamine distribution reported earlier. Thus, the distribution of glutamine (not a transmitter) and GABA (questionable transmitter) in gray matter are dictated by their synthesizing enzymes, whereas the distribution of glutamate and aspartate (likely transmitter suspects) cannot be explained on the basis of enzyme activities. Therefore, the enzyme activities may be related to the amino acid levels primarily in metabolic compartments, whereas the excess of certain amino acids in specific areas of the cord and roots may be related to functional compartments accumulated for use in synaptic transmission.
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