Cook W O, Dellinger J A, Singh S S, Dahlem A M, Carmichael W W, Beasley V R
Department of Veterinary Biosciences, University of Illinois, Urbana 61801.
Toxicol Lett. 1989 Oct;49(1):29-34. doi: 10.1016/0378-4274(89)90097-0.
Adult male Long-Evans rats were injected intraperitoneally with 1.5, 3.0 or 9.0 micrograms/kg of anatoxin-a(s) that had been extracted from laboratory-grown Anabaena flos-aquae NRC-525-17, 800 micrograms/kg of paraoxon, or a control solution. Blood, anterior spinal cord, and brain cerebellar, cortical, medullary, midbrain, hippocampal, hypothalamic, olfactory and striatal cholinesterase activity was determined in rats that died prior to 2 hours or were anesthetized and killed at 2 hours. Unlike paraoxon, anatoxin-a(s) did not cause detectable inhibition of cholinesterase in the central nervous system, but did cause inhibition of cholinesterase in blood, suggesting that anatoxin-a(s) is strictly a peripheral cholinesterase inhibitor.