NEUROLOGICAL RESEARCH, cilt.23, sa.6, ss.669-675, 2001 (SCI-Expanded)
The objective of the present study was to determine the time-dependent course of choline uptake in mature organotypic slice cultures of rabbit hippocampal formation and to assess the effects of continuous and single high-dose irradiation on choline uptake in cultivated slices in vitro. Transverse slices of hippocampus were dynamically incubated in a cerebrospinal fluid-like culture medium for 72 h. To study the changes in choline uptake longitudinally, the slice cultures were processed with 0.1 muM [H-3]-choline, and tritium accumulation was counted. Two different gamma irradiation sources (I-125 seeds and a clinical Co-60 source) were used as representative models of interstitial radiosurgery and other radiosurgical techniques. A total dose of approximately 6000 cGy was delivered to the brain slices in one session or in a continuous, relatively low-close rate fashion, and their effects on high-affinity choline uptake were examined, in another set of experiments with I-125, 5 muM hemicholinium-3 was used in choline uptake procedures as a competitive high-affinity choline uptake inhibitor. The results can be summarized as follows: (1) in the control group of the hippocampal tissue culture, there was a significant increase in tritium accumulation values from 0 to 48 h and a decrease thereafter; (2) continuous I-125 irradiation. caused a highly significant depression of the accumulation of tritium compared to that observed in the control group throughout its application for 72 h; (3) there was no significant change in the accumulation of tritium in the slices after single high-close rate irradiation with a Co-60 source; and (4) 5 muM hemicholinium significantly depressed the accumulation of tritium in both the control and the I-125-irradiated groups, and there was no longer a difference between I-125-irradiated and control groups when both groups were treated with hemicholinium. These results demonstrate that the delivery of continuous but relatively low-dose rate gamma irradiation is more efficacious than single high-dose external irradiation on high-affinity choline uptake in hippocampal nervous tissue. The results also,indicate that continuous irradiation specifically affected the high-affinity energy-dependent choline uptake mechanism, whereas nonspecific choline uptake did not seem to be disturbed.