Abstract

The turnover rate of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) in the rat striatum was estimated by measuring its accumulation after inhibition of GABA-transaminase (GABA-T) with gabaculine. Intrastriatal injections of 100 micrograms gabaculine induced a rapid and complete inhibition of GABA-T. GABA accumulation was linear with time for at least 60 min (estimated turnover rate = 25 nmol/mg protein/h). The accumulation of GABA after gabaculine administration in animals that had been treated with kainic acid (5 nmol intrastriatally, 7 days) was only 40% of the control value, indicating that a major fraction of the net increase in GABA content induced by gabaculine originates in kainic acid-sensitive neurons. Intrastriatal injection of a mixture of kainic acid (5 nmol) and gabaculine caused a net increase in striatal GABA content significantly greater than that observed in controls, suggesting that neuronal death induced by kainic acid is preceded by a period of increased neuronal activity. Glutamic acid, the putative neurotransmitter for the excitatory corticostriatal pathway, also produced a significant increase in striatal GABA accumulation when injected together with gabaculine. This effect was blocked by the administration of the glutamate receptor antagonist glutamic acid diethyl ester. The interactions between GABAergic neurons and other neurotransmitters present in the striatum were also analyzed.

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