Abstract
The mouse striatum contains about 2 ng/g of tryptamine and 600 ng/g of 5-hydroxytryptamine. No significant changes in mouse striatal tryptamine were observed after the administration of chlorpromazine, haloperidol, spiperone, or α-flupenthixol. The levels of 5-hydroxytryptamine were moderately reduced by chlorpromazine, spiperone, and α-flupenthixol but not by haloperidol. The administration of antipsychotic drugs to mice pretreated with a monoamine oxidase inhibitor (pargyline) produced an increase in the rate of accumulation of striatal tryptamine compared with that of pargyline-treated mice. In contrast, the rate of accumulation of 5-hydroxytryptamine after monoamine oxidase inhibition was reduced by chlorpromazine, spiperone, and α-flupenthixol but not haloperidol. D-Amphetamine administration did not change either tryptamine or its 5-hydroxyderivative while reserpine increased tryptamine and reduced 5-hydroxytryptamine. The results suggest that changes in striatal tryptamine may be controlled by the availability of tryptophan, the amino acid precursor of tryptamine.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Subject
Physiology (medical),Pharmacology,General Medicine,Physiology
Cited by
26 articles.
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