Epidemiological and aetiological aspects of diarrhoeal disease in the Eastern Cape
- Authors: Baxter, Esther
- Date: 1993
- Subjects: Diarrhea -- South Africa , Intestines -- Diseases , Pathogenic microorganisms -- South Africa
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MSc
- Identifier: vital:4045 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1004106 , Diarrhea -- South Africa , Intestines -- Diseases , Pathogenic microorganisms -- South Africa
- Description: Diarrhoeal disease is a major cause of mortality in children in developing countries. It also remains a serious problem among all age groups throughout the world. Whereas studies to determine the epidemiological and aetiological factors of diarrhoeal disease have been reported for other parts of South Africa and the world, as yet no information is available for the Eastern Cape. Therefore this study was undertaken to determine the factors for this area. Enteropathogens were compared for the different ages in the various population groups and, where possible, seasonal and geographical differences were emphasised. A total of 7 278 faecal samples were examined by six laboratories in the Eastern Cape during the period November 1988 to October 1990. Data was recorded noting the age, sex and population group of the patients. The towns selected were Port Elizabeth, Uitenhage, Cradock, Grahamstown and their surrounding areas. The isolation rates for the pathogens studied in the various population groups were compared to those reported in similar studies in other countries. The seasonal incidences of the various selected pathogens were compared with those reported from elsewhere in South Africa. It was thought that the higher temperature of summer may influence the finding in the White population group, while rainfall would play a greater role for the Coloured and Black populations. The geographical distribution of the pathogens emphasised the difference in living conditions between the different population groups. For example a generally higher infestation rate of Helminths occurred in rural areas and in the groups living under poorer conditions. The low isolation rates for certain bacteria and the large percentage of samples from which no pathogens were isolated indicate the need for further research. However, the finding should be valuable for determining Public Health priorities and in the management of outbreaks of diarrhoeal disease.
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- Date Issued: 1993
Bioaccumulation of metal cations by yeast and yeast cell components
- Authors: Brady, Dean
- Date: 1993
- Subjects: Yeast , Yeast fungi -- Biotechnology , Cations , Metal ions
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: vital:4046 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1004107 , Yeast , Yeast fungi -- Biotechnology , Cations , Metal ions
- Description: The aim of the project was to determine whether a by-product of industrial fermentations, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, could be utilized to bioaccumulate heavy metal cations and to partially define the mechanism of accumulation. S. cerevisiae cells were found to be capable of accumulating Cu²⁺in a manner that was proportional to the external Cu²⁺ concentration and inversely proportional to the concentration of biomass. The accumulation process was only minimally affected by temperature variations between 5 and 40°C or high ambient concentrations of sodium chloride. The accumulation process was however considerably affected by variations in pH, bioaccumulation being most efficient at pH 5 - 9 but becoming rapidly less so at either extreme of pH. Selection for copper resistant or tolerant yeast diminished the yeast's capacity for Cu²⁺ accumulation. For this and other reasons the development of heavy metal tolerance in yeasts was deemed to be generally counterproductive to heavy metal bioaccumulation. The yeast biomass was also capable of accumulating other heavy metal cations such as c0²⁺ or Cd²⁺. The yeast biomass could be harvested after bioaccumulation by tangential filtration methods, or alternatively could be packed into hollow fibre microfilter membrane cartridges and used as a fixed-bed bioaccumulator. By immobilizing the yeast in polyacrylamide gel and packing this material into columns, cu²⁺, C0²⁺ or Cd²⁺ could be removed from influent aqueous solutions yielding effluents with no detectable heavy metal, until breakthrough point was reached. This capacity was hypothesized to be a function of numerous "theoretical plates of equilibrium" within the column. The immobilized biomass could be eluted with EDTA and recycled for further bioaccumulation processes with minor loss of bioaccumulation capacity. Yeast cells were fractionated to permit identification of the major cell fractions and molecular components responsible for metal binding. Isolation of the yeast cell walls permitted investigation of their role in heavy metal accumulation. Although the amino groups of chitosan and proteins, the carboxyl groups of proteins, and the phosphate groups of phosphomannans were found to be efficient groups for the accumulation of copper, the less effective hydroxyl groups of the carbohydrate polymers (glucans and mannans) had a similar overall capacity for copper accumulation owing to their predominance in the yeast cell wall. The outer (protein-mannan) layer of the yeast cell wall was found to be a better Cu²⁺ chelator than the inner (chitinglucan) layer. It appeared that the physical condition of the cell wall may be more important than the individual macromolecular components of the cell wall in metal accumulation. It was apparent that the cell wall was the major, if not the sole contributor to heavy metal accumulation at low ambient heavy metal concentrations. At higher ambient metal concentrations the cytosol and vacuole become involved in bioaccumulation. Copper and other metals caused rapid loss of 70% of the intracellular potassium, implying permeation of the plasma membrane. This was followed by a slower "leakage" of magnesium from the vacuole which paralleled Cu²⁺ accumulation, suggesting that it may represent some form of ion-exchange. An intracellular copper chelating agent of approximately 2 kDalton molecular mass was isolated from copper tolerant yeast. This chelator was not a metallothionein and bound relatively low molar equivalents of copper compared to those reported for metallothionein. Treatment of the biomass with hot alkali yielded two biosorbents, one soluble (which could be used as a heavy metal flocculent), and an insoluble biosorbent which could be formed into a granular product to be used in fixed-bed biosorption columns. The granular biosorbent could accumulate a wide range of heavy metal cations in a semispecific manner and could be stored in a dehydrated form indefinitely, and rehydrated when required. Bioaccumulation by live algae was investigated as an alternative to yeast based processes. Various strains of algae, of which Scenedesmus and Selenastrum were the most effective, were found to be capable of accumulating heavy metals such as Cu²⁺, Pb²⁺ and Cr³⁺.
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- Date Issued: 1993
An investigation into cholinergic interactions in the rat pineal gland
- Authors: Eason, Jason Shane
- Date: 1993
- Subjects: Pineal gland -- Research , Acetylcholine -- Receptors
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MSc
- Identifier: vital:4048 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1004109 , Pineal gland -- Research , Acetylcholine -- Receptors
- Description: The mammalian pineal gland is mainly innervated by the sympathetic nervous system which modulates the activity of indole pathway enzymes and the secretion of pineal hormones. Recently researchers have demonstrated and characterized the presence of muscarinic cholinergic receptors in the pineal gland. However the role of these receptors remains unclear. In an attempt to investigate the role of cholinergic receptors in the pineal gland, a number of studies were carried out on the various steps in the indole metabolic pathway, using various agents which act on the cholinergic system. Investigations using pineal organ cultures showed that stimulation of these muscarinic cholinergic receptor sites with a parasympathomimetic agent, a rise in levels of aHT occurred without a concomitant increase in aMT levels. Further organ culture experiments using the cholinergic agonist acetylcholine and anticholinesterase agent physostigmine, produced a similar rise in aHT without altering aMT levels. This acetylcholine-induced rise in aHT levels were not altered by the ganglion blocking agent hexamethonium whilst the antimuscarinic agent atropine prevented the acetylcholine-induced rise in aHT levels. Thesefindings suggest that cholinergic agents may play a role in regulating indoleamine synthesis in the pineal gland. Cyclic-AMP assay studies showed that acetylcholine increases pineal cAMP levels significantly and does not influence the isoproterenol-induced cAMP rise in the pineal gland. The cAMP regulator cAMP-phosphodiesterase (cAMP-PDE) was found to increase significantly in the presence of the anticholinesterase agent physostigmine. NAT enzyme studies revealed that physostigmine does not affect NAT enzyme levels significantly and HIOMT studies showed that this agent does not inhibit HIOMT activity. The mechanism by which acetylcholine and physostigmine are able to cause a increase in aHT and not aMT levels needs to be researched further. Acetylcholinesterase enzyme assay studies revealed that the AChE enzyme undergoes a diurnal rhythm in the pineal gland with activity being higher during the day and lower at night. Investigations using the drug reserpine showed that this rhythm is not under the control of the sympathetic nervous system. Further research needs to be done however, in determining whether or not this enzyme is present in the pineal gland to regulate the levels of acetylcholine interacting with muscarinic receptors in the gland, or for some other reason. Choline acetyltransferase studies demonstrate the presence of the enzyme in the rat brain cerebral cortex as well as showing that melatonin increases ChAT enzyme activity in this tissue. This suggests that melatonin plays a role in cholinergic transmission there. ChAT activity could not be measured in the pineal gland however. Muscarinic receptor binding studies also carried out on rat brain cerebral cortex show that melatonin enhances cholinergic receptor affinity and receptor number in this tissue. In summary, data presented herein concur with proposals that: i) the cholinergic system affects the indole metabolic pathway by causing a rise in aRT but not aMT levels. ii) cholinergic agonist acetylcholine causes cAMP levels to rise with a concomitant increase in cAMP-PDE levels. iii) the enzyme acetylcholinesterase undergoes a diurnal rhythm in the pineal gland which is not under the control of the sympathetic nervous system. iv) the activity of the enzyme choline acetyltransferase is increased by melatonin in the rat brain cerebral cortex suggesting that melatonin facilitates cholinergic transmission in this tissue. v) melatonin enhances cholinergic receptor affinity and receptor number in the cerebral cortex of rat brain.
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- Date Issued: 1993
The effect of short chain fatty acids on picornavirus replication
- Authors: Ismail-Cassim, Nazeem
- Date: 1993
- Subjects: Viruses -- Reproduction , Picornaviruses , Antiviral agents -- Research
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MSc
- Identifier: vital:4030 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1004090 , Viruses -- Reproduction , Picornaviruses , Antiviral agents -- Research
- Description: Picornavirus proteins VP1 to VP3 are exposed on the surface of the virus particle whereas VP4 is internal and modified at its amino terminus by the addition of myristic acid (Chow et al., 1987; Paul et al., 1987). Myristic acid occupies a position in the core of mature poliovirus particles; it has been suggested that it may be important for particle integrity or in the localization of the capsid protein precursor on the hydrophobic membranes during virion assembly (Chow et al., 1987). To determine the function of the amino-terminal myristylation of VP4 in picornaviruses, and to establish whether competition for the acylation site is a possible approach to antiviral chemotherapy, the effect of fatty acids on virus replication has been examined. Some fatty acids are able to enter picornavirus-infected cells and compete for the myristylation site on VP4. Unexpectedly, it was found that short chain fatty acids also inhibit an early event in the replication of bovine enterovirus (BEV) at concentrations which have no detectable effect on cellular macromolecular synthesis and cloning. These findings indicate that fatty acids inhibit cell-mediated uncoating. Short chain fatty acids inhibit the replication of bovine enterovirus but are almost ineffective against poliovirus type 1, coxsackievirus B5, encephalomyocarditis virus and human rhinovirus lB. Lauric acid binds to bovine enterovirus, thereby stabilizing the virus particle to heat degradation. Fatty acid-bound virions attach to susceptible cells but fail to undergo cell-mediated uncoating. The inhibitory effect is reversible with chloroform and may result from a hydrophobic interaction between the fatty acid and a specific site on the virus particie.
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- Date Issued: 1993
The effect of hydrostatic carbon dioxide pressure and extracellular ethanol on the performance of the yeast strain Saccharomyces cerevisiae during fermentation
- Authors: Longden, Nicholas Guy
- Date: 1993
- Subjects: Brewing -- Microbiology , Yeast , Fermentation , Saccharomyces cerevisiae
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MSc
- Identifier: vital:4044 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1004105 , Brewing -- Microbiology , Yeast , Fermentation , Saccharomyces cerevisiae
- Description: The brewing industry constantly experiences problems in trying to maintain the quality of beer produced. Unfavourable conditions during fermentation may alter the performance of the yeast strain Saccharomyces cerevisiae, resulting in a "poor" end-product. It has been established that high concentrations of extracellular ethanol, when added to the fermentation medium inhibit yeast activity. It has been recently suggested that increased carbon dioxide pressure could inactivate the yeast activity adding to further brewing problems. The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of extracellular carbon dioxide pressure and ethanol addition, on yeast performance when added to a fermentation medium, and to establish whether an inhibitory relationship existed between ethanol and carbon dioxide pressure, when combined and added to the fermentation medium. Dissolved C0₂ in the medium, medium pH and substrate utilisation were analysed daily during a fermentation, as were membrane fatty acid composition. These parameters were used to assess the effect of ethanol and carbon dioxide on the yeast performance and consequently the final end-product. Supplementing the medium with extracellular ethanol, even as low as 5%, was shown to inhibit yeast performance during fermentation. This effect was even more marked as the ethanol concentration was increased, with almost total inhibition of yeast activity occuring after the addition of 15% ethanol (v/v). A similar effect was observed when elevated C0₂ pressures were applied to the medium, and although low C0₂ pressures initially induced the synthesis of saturated yeast membrane fatty acids, elevated C0₂ pressures (greater than 1,0 atm.) was shown to follow a similar inhibitory trend, if not as dramatic, as ethanol. A combination of both ethanol and C0₂ pressure showed a further increase in the level of yeast inhibition, although the low C0₂ pressure appeared to initially inhibit the toxicity of ethanol on the yeast. Increasing the levels of the C0₂/ethanol treatment (1,0 atm.), showed a synergistic effect on yeast performance. The results of this study indicate that both extracellular ethanol and carbon dioxide do appear to inhibit yeast performance and affect membrane fatty acid composition of the cells by inhibiting the synthesis of the respective fatty acid. This affect has a significant bearing on the general metabolism of the yeast cell.
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- Date Issued: 1993
The biotechnology of effluent-grown Spirulina, and application in aquaculture nutrition
- Authors: Maart, Brenton Ashley
- Date: 1993
- Subjects: Aquaculture , Spirulina , Algae -- Biotechnology , Fishes -- Feeding and feeds
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MSc
- Identifier: vital:4050 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1004111 , Aquaculture , Spirulina , Algae -- Biotechnology , Fishes -- Feeding and feeds
- Description: The biotechnology of production and utilisation of the cyanobacterium Spirulina has been well documented. Research has centred mainly on application in human and animal nutrition, and has been motivated by the high protein, vitamin, fatty acid and growth factor contents. The main obstacle in realising the full potential of this feed source has been the high production costs associated with its mass culture in defined media. The observation of blooms of Spirulina in tannery effluent evaporation ponds in Wellington, South Africa, prompted this investigation into the harvesting, and nutritional and toxicological evaluation of this potentially low-cost production system, with the ultimate aim of using the product in aquaculture rations. An investigation of the chemical gradient along the evaporation cascade showed a positive correlation between the prevailing chemical conditions and the dominant species populations. A standing crop of 9.5 tonnes/ha of Spirulina was found to be present in the latter alkaline ponds, characterised by relatively lower organic and sulphur contents. Initial harvesting of the biomass was achieved by the design, construction and implementation of a small-scale screen harvest, which yielded a 25 kg (dry weight) crop. A scale-up model was then designed, and implemented in a technical scale harvest, yielding a crop of 250 kg (dry weight). Both these harvests utilised the bloom of surface-autoflocculated biomass. Concentrated cell slurries were sun-dried on muslin beds, and milled to a coarse powder. An evaluation of the harvest revealed a chemical content similar to other published reports of defined media cultures, with the exception of the protein and amino acid contents. The observed lower levels of the latter two are almost certainly due to the sun-drying method employed, known to reduce the protein content due to thermal denaturation. Legislation demands the strict toxicological evaluation of new protein sources, and because of the effluent-nature of the growth medium of this source of Spirulina, its viability lies only in the application as an animal feed or supplement. A range of toxicological tests were chosen that were targeted to elucidate the possible toxicological constraints of this effluentgrown source of protein in animal nutrition. The nucleic acid and pesticide contents of the harvested biomass were within the prescribed safety ranges. Atomic absorption showed minimal accumulation of minerals and heavy metals from the effluent. A bioassay with the brine shrimp Anemia salina showed that the biomass contained no toxicologically active water-soluble components. A short term feeding trial with new-born chicks showed that supplementation with Spirulina had no effect on the growth rates and feed conversion ratios of the different feeding groups. Pathological analyses showed that the liver was the only target organ to elicit a change in response to supplementation of the diets with Spirulina. A general decrease in liver weight was noted, with Cu, Ca, Fe and Zn being significantly accumulated. A histopathological examination however, showed no cellular and functional aberration from the control animals. The toxicological analyses gave the preliminary safe go-ahead for the evaluation of effluent-grown Spirulina in aquaculture nutrition. The South African abalone Haliotis midae, and the rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss were chosen as representative species of edible cultured organisms. The technology for the culture of the perlemoen abalone is being established in South Africa, with the main area of research being the development of an artificial diet for high density culture. A 40 day growth trial demonstrated that lower concentrations of Spirulina supplemented to an agar-based fishmeal diet resulted in growth rates and feed conversion ratios similar to the control fishmeal and purified-casein diets, and thus has application potential in the nutrition of this high-cost marine delicacy. The aquaculture technology of freshwater rainbow trout is already well established. An eight week feeding trial with various concentrations of Spirulina showed that this effluent-grown protein source can partially replace fishmeal in semi-purified diets. Fish fed Spirulina did not exhibit decisive manifestations of toxicity, as determined in a histopathological study. In addition, Spirulina supplementation resulted in enhanced colouration of the skin and flesh, which may have implications in the aesthetic marketing of this sought-after table fish. The primary aim of this preliminary investigation thus concerned the determination of the biotechnological potential of this effluent-source of Spirulina. A technology transfer from the economically unfeasible defined-media culture was implemented. This project is ultimately aimed as a contribution towards the treatment of tannery wastewater, by the removal of contaminants from the effluent in the form of organic biomass.
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- Date Issued: 1993
Antimicrobial resistance patterns in a Port Elizabeth hospital
- Authors: Meiring, Jillian A
- Date: 1993
- Subjects: Antibiotics , Drug resistance in microorganisms , Hospitals -- Drug distribution systems -- South Africa -- Port Elizabeth
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MSc
- Identifier: vital:4043 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1004104 , Antibiotics , Drug resistance in microorganisms , Hospitals -- Drug distribution systems -- South Africa -- Port Elizabeth
- Description: Antibiotic resistance in clinical bacterial isolates remains an ongoing problem requiring continuous monitoring to effect some form of control. Comparative studies have not been previously reported for the Eastern Cape Region, South Africa and this study was undertaken to monitor resistance patterns in clinical isolates from Provincial Hospital, Port Elizabeth. Over the three year period 1989 to 1991, 9888 susceptibility results from isolates examined in the SAIMR pathology laboratory were analysed and collated using a stand-alone computer program. Resistance patterns for a range of nineteen antibiotics were collated for isolates from various sampling points within the hospital. Results were reported as resistance patterns in individually isolated species. Levels of resistance in each species were compared to those reported from South Africa and abroad, and changing patterns of resistance were noted within the three year period at the Provincial Hospital, Port Elizabeth.
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- Date Issued: 1993
The regulation of Serotonin N-acetyltransferase in the rat pineal gland
- Authors: Olivieri, Gianfranco
- Date: 1993
- Subjects: Serotonin -- Research Pineal gland Acetyltransferases
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: vital:4051 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1004112
- Description: The synthesis of the pineal hormone, melatonin, is finely regulated by the pineal enzyme serotonin N-acetyltransferase (NAT). In the absence of light, the activity of NAT is markedly enhanced by the release of nor-adrenaline from sympathetic nerve endings in the pineal. Exposure of animals to light during darkness causes a sudden and dramatic reduction in the activity of NAT. The present study investigated a possible mechanism for this sudden decline in NAT activity. These investigations included the determination of the effects of S-adenosylmethionine (SAM), adenosine nucleotides and calcium on NAT activity. In vitro experiments using SAM showed that pineals pre-incubated with SAM prior to adrenergic stimulation did not significantly alter NAT activity or pineal indoleamine metabolism. However, measurement of pineal cyclic AMP showed that SAM exposure reduced the adrenergic-induced rise in pineal cyclic AMP. Experiments using adenosine 5'-monophosphate (5'-AMP) showed that this nucleotide enhanced both dark- and isoproterenol-induced NAT activity. Adenosine 5'-triphosphate (A TP), on the other hand, reduced NAT activity with a concomitant reduction in pineal indoleamine metabolism. Exposure of isoproterenol-stimulated pineals in organ culture to propranolol resulted in a marked rise in ATP and adenosine 5'-diphosphate (ADP) synthesis accompanied by a decline in 5'-AMP levels as compared with pineals treated with isoproterenol alone. This then implies that exposure of animals to light could cause a change in pineal nucleotide levels. Since nucleotide levels are also controlled by calcium, experiments were carried out to determine the effect of calcium on pineal NAT activity. These experiments showed that ethyleneglycol-bis-N,N,N,N,-tetraacetic acid (EGTA) enhanced NAT activity whilst calcium reduced the activity in pineal homogenates, implying that calcium may act directly on NAT to regulate its activity. Exposure of pineal glands in organ culture to the calmodulin antagonist R24571 caused a rise in pineal cyclic AMP levels with a concomitant decrease in cAMP-phosphodiesterase activity. This was, however, accompanied by a decline in Nacetyl serotonin and melatonin synthesis. These findings implicate a number of factors in the regulation of pineal NAT activity. A mechanism for the regulation of pineal NAT is proposed.
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- Date Issued: 1993
Pineal-adrenal gland interactions in search of an anti-stressogenic role for melatonin
- Authors: Van Wyk, Elizabeth Joy
- Date: 1993
- Subjects: Pineal gland -- Secretions , Melatonin , Adrenal glands , Pineal gland -- Research
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MSc
- Identifier: vital:4054 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1004115 , Pineal gland -- Secretions , Melatonin , Adrenal glands , Pineal gland -- Research
- Description: The multiple functions of the pineal gland have been collectively interpreted as constituting a general anti-stressogenic role. The adrenal glands play a central role in maintaining homeostasis. The major neuroendocrine consequence of long-term stress is elevated circulating glucocorticoid levels. In this study, the effect of chronic, oral hydrocortisone treatment on pineal biochemistry was investigated in male Wi star rats of the albino strain. The results show that seven days of oral hydrocortisone treatment endows the pineal gland with the ability to increase melatonin synthesis in organ culture. The increase is accompanied by a rise in NAT activity, cyclic AMP levels and enhanced specific binding to the pineal B-adrenergic receptors. It appears that hydrocortisone sensitizes the pineal gland to stimulation by B-adrenergic agonists. thus rendering the pineal more responsive to B-adrenergic agonists. Further studies were directed at demonstrating an anti-stressogenic function for the pineal gland by investigating whether the principal pineal indole, melatonin. could protect against the deleterious effects of elevated. circulating drocortisone levels. The results show that chronic, oral hydrocortisone treatment significantly increases liver tryptophan pyrrolase activity. The catabolism of tryptophan by tryptophan pyrrolase is an important determinant of tryptophan availability to the brain, and therefore, brain serotonin levels. The findings show that melatonin inhibits basal and hydrocortisone-stimulated liver tryptophan pyrrolase apoenzyme activity in a dose-dependent manner. This inhibition suggests that melatonin may protect against excessive loss of tryptophan from circulation and against deficiencies in the cerebral serotinergic system which are associated with mood and behavioural disorders. It was shown that another deleterious effect of chronic hydrocortisone treatment is a significant increase in the number of glutamate receptors in the forebrain of male Wistar rats. The increase in receptor number observed in this study is probably due to an increase in the synthesis of glutamate receptors and is associated with a marked reduction in the affinity of the glutamate receptors for glutamate. possible to demonstrate an receptor number or the For practical reasons, it was not effect of melatonin on either glutamate affinity of glutamate receptors for glutamate in rat forebrain membranes. In view of the neurotoxic effect of glutamate in the eNS, the functional significance of recently described glutamate receptors in the pineal gland was investigated. The results show that 10-4 M glutamate significantly inhibits the isoprenaline-stimulated synthesis of N-acetylserotonin and melatonin in organ culture when the pineal glands were pre-incubated with glutamate for 4 hours prior to stimulation with isoprenalin and when glutamate and isoprenaline were administered together in vitro. GABA, a glutamate metabolite could not mimic the decrease in isoprenalinestimulated melatonin, and it is likely that the observed effects were directly attributed to glutamate. Incubation of the pineal gland with 10-4 M glutamate in organ culture did not affect HIOMT activity in pineal homogenates, but significantly elevated both basal and isoprenaline-stimulated NAT activity. It was concluded that glutamate only inhibits melatonin synthesis in intact pineal glands and not in pineal homogenates. The present study has provided further support for an interaction between the pineal and the adrenal glands. There is an ever increasing likelihood that melatonin is an anti-stressogenic hormone and that the pineal gland may have a protective role to play in the pathology of stress-related diseases.
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- Date Issued: 1993