Effects of amphetamine on carrier-mediated and electrically stimulated dopamine release in slices of rat caudate-putamen abd nucleus-accumbens

Mahmoud M. Iravani, Z. L. Kruk

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

24 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The effects of (+)-amphetamine on carrier-mediated and electrically stimulated dopamine release were investigated using fast cyclic voltammetry in rat brain slices incorporating the nucleus accumbens, and in the caudate putamen. In the caudate putamen, dopamine release either increased with increasing frequency of local electrical stimulation (hot spots) or did not increase significantly (cold spots); dopamine release increased with increasing frequency of electrical stimulation in the nucleus accumbens. Local pressure application of(+)-amphetamine from a micropipette caused dopamine efflux at all sites examined, and this was not affected by sulpiride, indicating that efflux of dopamine caused by (+)amphetamine is not regulated by dopamine D-2 autoreceptors. (+)-Amphetamine reduced single-pulse electrically stimulated dopamine release at all sites; sulpiride reversed this decrease, indicating that endogenous dopamine released by (+)-amphetamine activates dopamine D-2 autoreceptors. In nucleus accumbens and hot spots, (+)-amphetamine did not affect 20-pulse 50-Hz-stimulated dopamine release, whereas in cold spots it potentiated 20-pulse 50-Hz-stimulated dopamine release. We conclude th at (+)-amphetamine modifies electrically stimulated dopamine release by uptake inhibition or by indirect activation of D-2 autoreceptors; the precise mechanism is determined by site and duration of electrical stimulation.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1161-1168
Number of pages8
JournalJournal of Neurochemistry (JNC)
Volume64
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Mar 1995

Keywords

  • (+)-AMPHETAMINE
  • FAST CYCLIC VOLTAMMETRY
  • BRAIN SLICES
  • CAUDATE PUTAMEN
  • NUCLEUS ACCUMBENS
  • HOT SPOTS
  • DOPAMINE D-2 AUTORECEPTORS
  • DOPAMINE RELEASE
  • BRAIN-SLICES
  • NEUROTRANSMITTER RELEASE
  • PRESYNAPTIC REGULATION
  • STRIATUM
  • MATRIX
  • EFFLUX
  • AUTORECEPTORS
  • TRANSPORT
  • NOREPINEPHRINE

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