“…granular layer of the cerebellum, transaldolase activity was three times that in other cell structures (Kauffman, 1972). The demonstration (a) of the operation of the hexosemonophosphate shunt (Appel and Parrot, 1970;Hothersall et al, 1981) and the presence of the enzymes and metabolites of the shunt pathway in isolated nerve terminals (Kaaman and Harkonen, 1977), (b) the enhancement of their activity by electrical stimulation in brain slices (Kimura et al, 1974) and crayfish stretch receptor neurons (Giacobini and Jongkind, 1968), after axotomy in superior cervical ganglion (Harkonen and Kauffman, 1974), and by neurotransmitters such as noradrenaline, 5-hydroxytryptamine, and acetylcholine in cerebral cortical fragments (Barondes et al, 1961) and synapses (Appel and Parrot, 1970), and (c) their inhibition by imipramine, an antidepressant (Kimura et al, 1974), provide compelling evidence of the involvement of the hexosemonophosphate shunt in synaptic events of neuronal activity.…”