Author:
Juorio A. V.,Durden D. A.
Abstract
The concentration of adrenaline in the domestic fowl diencephalon was determined by a mass spectrometric or fluorimetric method. The values obtained were 701 and 803 ng/g, respectively. The administration of phenylethanolamine N-methyltransferase (PNMT) (EC 2.1.1.28) inhibitors (SK&F 7698 or SK&F 64139) to the domestic fowl produced a marked reduction in the diencephalic noradrenaline methylation (from 25% in the controls to 7–8% in the PNMT-inhibitor-treated animals); the large decrease in adrenaline concentration (to 14–18% of controls) was accompanied by a moderate decrease in noradrenaline concentration (to 63–84% of controls). Reserpine, in contrast, produced a marked reduction of both adrenaline and noradrenaline (to 12 and 17% of controls, respectively) but did not affect the percentage of methylation. It would seem a reasonable assumption that in the domestic fowl diencephalon, adrenaline is formed by N-methylation of noradrenaline and functions there as a transmitter in some specific adrenergic neuronal pathways.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Cited by
10 articles.
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