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The use of tryptophan depletion in the study of the mechanism of action of psychopharmaceuticals
Jirásková, Markéta ; Valeš, Karel (advisor) ; Telenský, Petr (referee)
Tryptophan depletion is a non-pharmacological and non-invasive method extensively used to investigate the role of serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine in humans and animals. The method is based on reducing the availability of the essential amino acid tryptophan, the dietary serotonin precursor. As a precursor of serotonin, L-Tryptophan has a key role in the regulation of many physiological processes and, inter alia, in the pathology and pathophysiology of neuropsychiatric disorders and diseases. Despite the fact, that the method of tryptophan depletion has been applied in many experimental studies, the exact mechanism, by which tryptophan depletion inducted neurophysiological effects, remain unclear. Also, the protentional use of this method together with other drug coadministration has not been explored in detail yet. In this thesis, the most possible mechanisms of tryptophan depletion are discussed. Biochemical and behavioural effects of low dose of dizocilpine (0.1 mg/kg and 0.15 mg/kg) in animal model of tryptophan depletion are investigated as well. And finally, effects of administration of allopregnanolone and tacrine in model of tryptophan depletion with coadministration of MK-801 are studied. The results show that acute tryptophan depletion with prior starvation, not chronic depletion, caused...

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