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Trying to address the entire field of presynaptic modulation of
neurotransmitter release is a rather daunting undertaking, one that
is well beyond the scope of this book. In addition, studies of
release modulation, particularly from a biochemical standpoint,
have been the subjects of several extensive reviews, meetings, and
books (Langer, 1978; Chesselet, 1984; Wessler, 1989; Kalsner and
Westfall, 1990), which provide an essential introduction to this
subject. What we have focused on, however, are several specific
aspects of release modulation that perhaps have not been as
extensively discussed. First, we felt that it was important to
focus on modulation in the central nervous system; much of the work
that has been done in the past has emphasized the peripheral
nervous system (e. g. , the autonomic nervous system and the
neuromuscular junction), in part because such preparations are more
amenable to study. However, it is becoming clear that modulation of
release is, if anything, more important in the central nervous
system than in the periphery, and that virtually every transmitter
system that has been studied shows some type of release modulation.
The other way in which we have restricted the scope of this volume
has been to try to emphasize studies in which functional (primarily
electrophysiological) measures of transmitter release have been
used rather than direct biochemical measures of release, and to
explore the ways in which release modulation affects the normal
physiological function at synapses.
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