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Determination of amino acid levels in the rat striatum,after administration of ethanol alone and associated with ketamine,a glutamatergic antagonist
Authors:Silvâ  nia Maria Mendes Vasconcelos,Gabriel Teixeira Montezuma Sales,Natá  lia Martins Lima,Paula Matias Soares,Elaine Cristina Pereira,Marta Maria Franç  a Fonteles,Francisca Clé  a Florenç  o de Sousa,Glauce Socorro de Barros Viana
Affiliation:1. Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, Federal University of Ceará, Rua Cel. Nunes de Melo 1127, CEP 60431-270, Fortaleza, Brazil;2. State University of Ceará, Brazil
Abstract:
The main goal of this study was to determine the amino acids (glutamate, aspartate, glutamine and tyrosine) levels in the rat striatum, after ethanol administration alone and/or associated with ketamine. In protocol 1 (Et + ketamine-1), ethanol was administered to male Wistar rats until the 7th day, and at the next day the group received only ketamine (25 mg/kg, i.p.) up to the 14th day. In protocol 2 (Et + ketamine-2), ethanol was also administered up to the 7th day, and was associated with ketamine from the 8th up to the 14th day. In other groups, animals were treated daily with ethanol (4 g/kg, p.o.), for 7 or 14 days or ketamine daily for 7 days. Controls were administered with distilled water for 7 days. Results showed that, in protocol 1, aspartate (ASP) levels increased after ketamine administration, as compared to the controls. This effect was inhibited in the group Et + ketamine-1. Ethanol (7 days) increased glutamate (GLU) levels, as compared to control, and this effect did not differ significantly from that observed in the ketamine group. When ketamine was administered after the ethanol withdrawal (protocol 1), no alterations in those amino acid concentrations were seen, as compared to the control and ketamine groups. A tendency for increasing GLU levels was observed, after administration of ethanol (14 days) or ketamine alone or associated (protocol 2), when compared to control values. In protocol 2, TYR levels decreased as related to controls and to the 14-day ethanol-treated group. We can assume that ketamine presents only an antagonist effect, in animals pretreated with ethanol, followed by ketamine administered from the 8th day on. This is due to the fact that NMDA receptors are already sensitized, leading to a decrease in these receptors functions and consequently to ASP and GLU releases.
Keywords:Ethanol   Glutamate   Ketamine   Amino acids   Striatum
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