Serotonin was named for what it does and where it was found. The name combines serum, from Latin serum meaning whey or watery fluid (referring to blood serum), with -tonin from Greek tonos meaning tension or tone. The compound was discovered as a substance in blood serum that affected vascular tone — specifically, it made blood vessels constrict.
Maurice Rapport, Arda Green, and Irvine Page isolated the compound at the Cleveland Clinic in 1948. They had spent years tracking a mysterious vasoconstrictor present in clotted blood. When they finally purified it, Rapport coined the name serotonin: the serum agent that affects tone. The name stuck, even though later research revealed that vascular constriction is one of the least interesting things the molecule does.
Through the 1950s and 1960s, researchers discovered that serotonin was present in the brain and functioned as a neurotransmitter — a chemical messenger between nerve cells. Its roles turned out to be vast: mood regulation, sleep cycles, appetite, pain perception, body temperature, and dozens of other processes. The link between serotonin and depression led to the development of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) in the 1980s, making serotonin one of the most publicly discussed molecules in pharmacology.
The Latin word serum originally described the thin, watery liquid that separates from milk when it curdles — whey. Medical Latin applied it to the clear fluid component of blood. Greek tonos meant a stretching or tightening, from the verb teinein (to stretch), the same root behind the English words tone, tonic, and tension.
Despite its association with the brain and mood, roughly 90 percent of the body's serotonin is manufactured in the gastrointestinal tract, where it regulates intestinal movements. The gut-brain connection that modern research emphasizes was literally built into serotonin from the beginning — the molecule works across both systems.