Determination of local rates of 45Ca influx into rat brain by quantitative autoradiography: studies of aging.
Academic Article
Overview
abstract
Calcium homeostasis in brain is altered in many conditions, but there is no method to assay quantitatively local calcium flux into brain in vivo. 45Ca uptake into gross-dissected brain regions was measured and compared with results obtained with a quantitative autoradiographic procedure developed to assay influx of 45Ca into brain. Regional calcium contents, brain-to-plasma distribution ratios for calcium and 45Ca, apparent plasma-to-brain transfer coefficients, and net uptake of 45Ca into gross-dissected regions varied by as much as 80%. Local rates of net uptake of 45Ca into 34 structures determined by autoradiography varied by 12- to 14-fold, and rates of movement of 45Ca down concentrations gradients varied by a factor of 7. Previous studies with gross-dissected brain regions suggested changes in calcium uptake into brain during aging, but the values of all the variables assayed in the present study were similar in young adult, middle-aged, and old male rats. A quantitative autoradiographic procedure to assay levels of 45Ca in brain provides the anatomical resolution required to investigate local calcium flux in a variety of physiological and pathological conditions.