PMID: 6410048Aug 1, 1983Paper

Chlordiazepoxide reduces in vivo serotonin release in the basal ganglia of encéphale isolé but not anesthetized cats: evidence for a dorsal raphe site of action

The Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
P SoubriéJ Glowinski

Abstract

By using a push-pull cannula technique and an isotopic method for the estimation of [3H]serotonin continuously synthetized from [3H]tryptophan, the effects of a benzodiazepine, chlordiazepoxide, were investigated on the in vivo release of [3H]serotonin in the cat basal ganglia. Chlordiazepoxide injection (10 mg/kg i.p.) decreased striatal and nigral [3H]serotonin release and enhanced the [3H]amine release in the dorsal raphe. These changes were blocked by the continuous superfusion of the dorsal raphe with Ro 15-1788 (10(-5) M), a benzodiazepine receptor antagonist. Chlordiazepoxide (10(-5) M) applied to the dorsal raphe reduced nigral [3H]serotonin release while decreasing [3H]serotonin release locally in the dorsal raphe. Furthermore, the superfusion of serotonergic nerve terminals of the substantia nigra or the caudate nucleus with chlordiazepoxide (10(-5) M) never altered the local release of [3H]serotonin. These data strongly suggest that the (inhibitory) influences exerted by chlordiazepoxide on serotonergic transmission more likely involved cell bodies and/or dendrites rather than terminals of serotonergic neurons. Chlordiazepoxide-induced changes in [3H]serotonin release were only observed in "encéphale isolé" and not i...Continue Reading

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