Traumatic brain injury reduces hippocampal high-affinity [ 3H]choline uptake but not extracellular choline levels in rats

Hippocampal cholinergic hypofunction may contribute to memory deficits following experimental traumatic brain injury. These studies examined two important factors in acetylcholine synthesis: choline availability and neuronal uptake. No reductions in basal extracellular choline levels, using microdia...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neuroscience letters 1994-10, Vol.180 (2), p.127-130
Hauptverfasser: Dixon, C.Edward, Bao, Juliang, Bergmann, John S, Johnson, Kenneth M
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Hippocampal cholinergic hypofunction may contribute to memory deficits following experimental traumatic brain injury. These studies examined two important factors in acetylcholine synthesis: choline availability and neuronal uptake. No reductions in basal extracellular choline levels, using microdialysis, were observed 2 weeks after cortical impact injury. However, studies of high affinity [ 3H]choline uptake in the hippocampus, measured in a synaptosomal preparation, found a reduction in the maximum velocity of choline uptake ( V max), while no differences in affinity constants ( K m) were found. The results suggest that post-traumatic cholinergic deficits are not attributable to decreased availability of choline, but may be associated with either a decreased ability of cholinergic neurons to take up choline and/or a loss of cholinergic neurons.
ISSN:0304-3940
1872-7972
DOI:10.1016/0304-3940(94)90503-7