d-Serine Increases Release of Acetylcholine in Rat Submandibular Glands

Biology (Basel). 2023 Sep 11;12(9):1227. doi: 10.3390/biology12091227.

Abstract

d-serine has been observed in submandibular gland tissue in rats, but its functions remain to be clarified. Oral administration of d-serine, but not l-serine, increased its concentrations in the submandibular gland and pilocarpine-induced salivary secretion. In vivo microdialysis was used to collect the d- and l-enantiomers of amino acids from local interstitial fluid in the rat submandibular gland. The proportion of the d-form of serine in interstitial fluid was higher than that in plasma or saliva. Perfusion of the rat submandibular gland with d-serine and l-glutamic acid via the submandibular gland artery resulted in a significant increase in salivary secretion after stimulation of muscarinic receptors with carbachol. In vivo microdialysis applied to the submandibular glands of rats showed that infusion of d-serine along with l-glutamate through the microdialysis probe significantly elevated acetylcholine levels in local interstitial fluids in the submandibular glands of anesthetized rats as compared to that with l-glutamate alone in an N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor glycine site antagonist-sensitive manner. These results indicate that d-serine augments salivary secretion by increasing acetylcholine release in the salivary glands.

Keywords: acetylcholine release; d-serine; in vivo microdialysis; saliva; submandibular gland.

Grants and funding

The study was funded in part by grants from JPSP KAKENHI; grant number 25462932, 18K09514, 18K08869, 21K08955, and 22K09120.