Perturbation of Rat Brain Serotonergic Systems Results in an Inverse Relation Between Substance P and Serotonin Concentrations Measured in Discrete Nuclei

Abstract
Since substance P (SP) has been demonstrated to coexist with serotonin (5-HT) in the same population of neurons in the descending raphe system, we have studied the possibility of interactions between these neu-rotransmitters in other brain areas. Brain nuclei were punched from frozen 300–μm slices of rat brain and extracted with 0.1 M HCIO4 or 2 M acetic acid prior to assay, respectively, of 5-HT content by HPLC with electrochemical detection or SP content by specific radioimmunoassay. Ten days after injection of rats with the 5-HT neurotoxin P-chloroamphetamine (PCA, 10 mg/kg, B.W., i.p.) or 3 days after 5-HT synthesis blockade with p-chlorophenylalanine (PCPA, 300 mg/kg, B.W., i.p.), the 5-HT content of all brain nuclei studied was reduced by means of, respectively, 50% and 81%. In PCA-treated animals, the SP content of the periaqueductal grey matter was significantly increased; PCPA treatment caused, in addition, large increases in the SP content of five other brain nuclei. Blockade of 5-HT receptors by methysergide (15 mg/kg for 5 days) did not significantly change 5-HT levels or turnover, but resulted in 50–200% increases in the SP content of 10 of the 28 brain nuclei studied. Significant decreases in the SP content of numerous areas were seen following treatments (pargyline 30 mg/kg, alone or in combination with 5-hydroxytryptophan, 60 mg/kg) that simultaneously increased 5-HT levels. These results illustrate the modulation of distinct SP-containing systems of the rat brain by perturbation of central serotoninergic pathways and indicate a reciprocal relationship between the SP and 5-HT concentrations of numerous brain nuclei, in particular n. striae terminalis, n. raphe dorsalis, n. accumbens, n. septi, substantia grisea centralis, and n. raphes medianus.