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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2015 Jan 30.
Published in final edited form as: Pharmacopsychiatry. 2012 Jun 14;46(1):29–34. doi: 10.1055/s-0032-1314843

Table 1.

Spontaneous release of serotonin, NGF and BDNF from platelets and effects of calcium.

Serotonin p1 p2 NGF p1 p2 BDNF p1 p2
total 747.2±215 (17) 254.7±48.9 (9) 417.7±99.9 (15)
[100±28.7 (17)] [100± 19.2 (9)] [100±23.9 (15)]
control/10 min 75.5±0.3 (14) 230.2±52.7 (9) 55.1 ±12.9 (12)
[10.1 ±2.4 (14)] [90.4± 20.7 (9)] [13.2 ±3.1 (12)]
control + Ca2+/10 min 192.0±0.01 (9) ns 248.6±32.6 (9) ns 301.6±45.1 (9) ***
[25.7±8.4 (9)] [97.6± 12.8 (9)] [72.2±10.8 (9)]
control/60 min 38.1 ±9.0 (12) ns 227.4±32.1 (9) ns 66.4± 12.5 (12) ns
[5.1 ±1.2(12)] [89.3± 12.6 (9)] [15.9±3.0 (12)]
control + Ca2+/60 min 120.3±36.6 (7) ns ns 122.5± 19.4 (10) ** ** 397.6±51.0 (9) *** ns
[16.1 ±4.9 (7)] [48.1 ±7.6 (10)] [95.2±12.2 (9)]

Rat platelets were isolated from whole blood. Platelets were incubated with or without 2 mM Ca2+ at 37 °C for 10 or 60 min. Totals and supernatants were collected and serotonin, NGF and BDNF release was analyzed by HPLC-EC and ELISA, respectively. Values are given as mean ± SEM ng/ml/108 platelets (serotonin) or pg/ml/108 platelets (NGF, BDNF). Values in brackets give the mean ± SEM % of total control. The number of analyzed samples is given in parenthesis. Statistical analysis was performed by one-way ANOVA with a Fisher LSD posthoc test. p1 = control vs. control + Ca2+; p2 = 10 min vs. 60 min;

*

p < 0.05

**

p < 0.01

***

p< 0.001; ns, not significant