Raabe W A, Onstad G R
Brain Res. 1982 Jun 24;242(2):291-8. doi: 10.1016/0006-8993(82)90312-2.
Intoxication with ammonium acetate abolished the suppression of action potential generation by cortical postsynaptic inhibition, i.e. produced 'disinhibition', due to the inactivation of neuronal Cl- extrusion. With the occurrence of disinhibition cerebral ammonia increased to 445% of normal; glutamine increased to 170%. Methionine sulfoximine (MSO), an inhibitor of glutamine synthetase, produced disinhibition about 3 h after administration; at this time cerebral ammonia was increased to 290% of normal, glutamine was unchanged. Intoxication with MSO for less than 3 h significantly decreased the amount of ammonium acetate needed to produce disinhibition at cerebral ammonia concentrations ot 340-430% of normal. MSO produces an endogenous ammonia intoxication which: (i) decreases the amount of exogenous ammonia required to affect cortical postsynaptic inhibitions; and (ii) eventually becomes sufficiently severe to disturb cortical inhibitory neuronal interactions by itself.