COMPARISON OF THE RESPONSES OF SINGLE CORTICAL NEURONES TO TYRAMINE AND NORADRENALINE: EFFECTS OF DESIPRAMINE

Abstract
1 The technique of microelectrophoresis was used in order to compare the actions of tyramine and noradrenaline on single neurones in the cerebral cortex of the rat. 2 Tyramine could both excite and depress cortical neurones. Each tyramine‐sensitive cell was also sensitive to noradrenaline. There was a high correlation between the directions of responses to tyramine and noradrenaline, most cells excited by tyramine being excited by noradrenaline, and most cells depressed by tyramine being depressed by noradrenaline. 3 In the case of both excitatory and depressant responses, tyramine appeared to be less potent than noradrenaline. 4 Tyramine evoked ‘slower’ responses than noradrenaline, both the latencies to onset and the recovery times being longer for responses to tyramine than for responses to noradrenaline. 5 When the rates of release of tyramine and noradrenaline from micropipettes were measured in vitro, no significant difference could be observed between the transport numbers of the two drugs. Thus the difference in potency between the two drugs, and the difference in the time courses of responses to the two drugs, are presumably of biological origin. 6 Desipramine could discriminate between neuronal responses to tyramine and noradrenaline: responses to tyramine were antagonized, while responses to noradrenaline were either potentiated or unaffected. Responses to DL‐homocysteic acid were not affected by desipramine. 7 The results are consistent with the hypothesis that tyramine is an indirectly acting sympathomimetic amine in the brain, and desipramine acts by blocking the uptake of both tyramine and noradrenaline into presynaptic noradrenergic nerve terminals.