Saland L C, Dail W G, Reyes E
J Neurobiol. 1980 Nov;11(6):577-89. doi: 10.1002/neu.480110608.
p-Chloroamphetamine (PCA), an agent known to cause depletion of levels of brain serotonin in rodents, was administered to rats in three sequential injections (10mg/kg) to study effects on the hypothalamic median eminence and pituitary gland. One week following the initial sequence of injections of PCA, light and electron micrographs revealed degenerate fibers in the outer zone of the median eminence. Lower drug doses or single 10-mg/kg doses did not lead to morphologic changes. Neuronal processes located in the pituitary intermediate lobe appeared normal although there was a significant increase in the numbers of secretory granules contained within intermediate lobe cells drug-treated rats, as compared to controls. Fluorometric analysis of levels of catecholamine and indoleamine showed a decrease in serotonin in median eminence and pons-medulla, but no change in that of the pituitary. Levels of dopamine and norepinephrine remained unchanged after PCA treatment. The data suggest that fibers affected in the median eminence contain serotonin. Processes in the intermediate lobe may be resistant to the serotonin-lowering effects of PCA observed in brain tissue. In addition, PCA may directly affect granule release from pituitary cells, or may alternatively act on hypothalamic regions which affect the release of intermediate lobe cell hormones.