Light Stimulates Tyrosine Hydroxylase Activity and Dopamine Synthesis in Retinal Amacrine Neurons

P. Michael Iuvone(St. Elizabeths Hospital), C. L. Galli(St. Elizabeths Hospital), C. K. Garrison-Gund(St. Elizabeths Hospital), Norton H. Neff(St. Elizabeths Hospital)
Science
November 24, 1978
Cited by 416

Abstract

Retinal dopamine-containing amacrine neurons are rapidly activated by light, as shown by an increase in the rate of dopamine formation in vivo and a concomitant increase in the activity of tyrosine hydroxylase, measured in vitro with a subsaturating concentration of pteridine cofactor. Activation of tyrosine hydroxylase also occurs when isolated eyes from rats killed in the dark are exposed to a strobe light. Studies of amacrine neurons should provide basic data about the biochemical processing of visual information, as well as the physiological presynaptic regulatory mechanisms of dopamine-containing neurons.


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