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1.
Olfactory receptor neurons of the nasal epithelium project via the olfactory nerve (ON) to the glomeruli of the main olfactory bulb, where they form glutamatergic synapses with the apical dendrites of mitral and tufted cells, the output cells of the olfactory bulb, and with juxtaglomerular interneurons. The glomerular layer contains one of the largest population of dopamine (DA) neurons in the brain, and DA in the olfactory bulb is found exclusively in juxtaglomerular neurons. D2 receptors, the predominant DA receptor subtype in the olfactory bulb, are found in the ON and glomerular layers, and are present on ON terminals. In the present study, field potential and single-unit recordings, as well as whole cell patch-clamp techniques, were used to investigate the role of DA and D2 receptors in glomerular synaptic processing in rat and mouse olfactory bulb slices. DA and D2 receptor agonists reduced ON-evoked synaptic responses in mitral/tufted and juxtaglomerular cells. Spontaneous and ON-evoked spiking of mitral cells was also reduced by DA and D2 agonists, and enhanced by D2 antagonists. DA did not produce measurable postsynaptic changes in juxtaglomerular cells, nor did it alter their responses to mitral/tufted cell inputs. DA also reduced 1) paired-pulse depression of ON-evoked synaptic responses in mitral/tufted and juxtaglomerular cells and 2) the amplitude and frequency of spontaneous, but not miniature, excitatory postsynaptic currents in juxtaglomerular cells. Taken together, these findings are consistent with the hypothesis that activation of D2 receptors presynaptically inhibits ON terminals. DA and D2 agonists had no effect in D2 receptor knockout mice, suggesting that D2 receptors are the only type of DA receptors that affect signal transmission from the ON to the rodent olfactory bulb.  相似文献   

2.
A growing body of evidence suggests that teleosts are important models for the study of neural processing of olfactory information, and the functional role of dopamine (DA), which is a potent neuromodulator endogenous to the mammalian olfactory bulb, has been one of the strongest focuses in this field. However, the cellular mechanisms of dopaminergic neuromodulation in olfactory bulbar neural circuits have not been fully understood. We investigated such mechanisms by using the goldfish, which offers several advantages for analyzing olfactory information processing by electrophysiological methods. First, we found in the olfactory bulb that numerous cell bodies of the dopaminergic neurons are mainly distributed in the mitral cell layer and extend fine processes to the glomerular layer. Next, we made in vitro field potential recordings and showed that synaptic transmissions from mitral to granule cells were suppressed by DA application. DA also increased the paired-pulse ratio, suggesting that the suppression of synaptic transmission is caused by a decrease in presynaptic glutamate release from the mitral cells. Furthermore, DA significantly suppressed the oscillatory activity of the olfactory bulb in response to olfactory stimuli. Although DA suppresses the synaptic inputs from the olfactory nerve to the olfactory bulbar neurons in mammals, this phenomenon was not observed in the goldfish. These findings indicate that suppression of the mitral to granule cell synaptic transmission in the reciprocal synapses plays an important role in the negative regulation of olfactory responsiveness in the goldfish olfactory bulb.  相似文献   

3.
The glomerular layer of the olfactory bulb (OB) contains synaptic connections between olfactory sensory neurons and OB neurons as well as connections among OB neurons. A subpopulation of external tufted cells and periglomerular cells (juxtaglomerular neurons) expresses dopamine, and recent reports suggest that dopamine can inhibit olfactory sensory neuron activation of OB neurons. In this study, whole cell electrophysiological and primary culture techniques were employed to characterize the neuromodulatory properties of dopamine on glutamatergic transmission between rat OB mitral/tufted (M/T) cells and interneurons. Immunocytochemical analysis confirmed the expression of tyrosine hydroxylase, the rate-limiting enzyme for dopamine synthesis, in a subpopulation of cultured neurons. D2 receptor immunoreactivity was also observed in cultured M/T cells. Dopamine reduced spontaneous excitatory synaptic events recorded in interneurons. Although the D1 receptor agonist SKF38393 and the D2 receptor agonist bromocriptine mesylate mimicked this effect, evoked excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) recorded from monosynaptically coupled neuron pairs were attenuated by dopamine and bromocriptine but not by SKF38393. Neither glutamate-evoked currents nor the membrane resistance of the postsynaptic interneuron were affected by dopamine. However, evoked calcium channel currents in the presynaptic M/T cell were diminished during the application of either dopamine or bromocriptine, but not SKF38393. Dopamine suppressed calcium channel currents even after nifedipine blockade of L-type channels, suggesting that inhibition of the dihydropyridine-resistant high-voltage activated calcium channels implicated in transmitter release may mediate dopamine's effects on spontaneous and evoked synaptic transmission. Together, these data suggest that dopamine inhibits excitatory neurotransmission between M/T cells and interneurons via a presynaptic mechanism.  相似文献   

4.
PurposeAllergic rhinitis (AR) is a common otolaryngology disease and one of the clinical causes of olfactory dysfunction (OD). The olfactory bulb serves as a transfer station for olfactory information transmission, and alleviating its neuroinflammation may be expected to improve AR-induced OD. Recent studies have suggested that the dopamine D2 receptor acts as a key target in regulating immune functions and neuroinflammatory reaction. However, the effect of dopamine D2 receptor on AR-induced neuroinflammation is still unknown.MethodsAn AR mouse model with OD induced by ovalbumin were constructed. The buried food pellet test was to evaluate the olfactory function of the mice. Immunofluorescence staining, hematoxylin and eosin staining, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and western blotting were also used to investigate the molecular mechanisms underlying the anti-inflammatory effects of the dopamine D2 receptor in AR-induced OD.ResultsWe found that AR-induced OD has a relationship with inflammatory responses in the olfactory bulb. Nasal administration of quinpirole (Quin, a dopamine D2 receptor agonist, 3 mg/kg) improved olfactory function in mice, inhibited the expression of toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4)/nuclear factor-κB (NF-κB) signalings and the levels of tumor necrosis factor-α, interleukin (IL)-1β and IL-6 in the olfactory bulb. In vitro, Quin (20 μmol/L) inhibited the release of TLR4/NF-κB signalings-dependent inflammatory cytokines in cultured microglia.ConclusionsActivation of the dopamine D2 receptor inhibits the release of inflammatory cytokines through TLR4/NF-κB signaling in the olfactory bulb microglia, and protects olfactory function.  相似文献   

5.
Although D2 dopamine receptors have been localized to olfactory receptor neurons (ORNs) and dopamine has been shown to modulate voltage-gated ion channels in ORNs, dopaminergic modulation of either odor responses or excitability in mammalian ORNs has not previously been demonstrated. We found that <50 microM dopamine reversibly suppresses odor-induced Ca2+ transients in ORNs. Confocal laser imaging of 300-microm-thick slices of neonatal mouse olfactory epithelium loaded with the Ca(2+)-indicator dye fluo-4 AM revealed that dopaminergic suppression of odor responses could be blocked by the D2 dopamine receptor antagonist sulpiride (<500 microM). The dopamine-induced suppression of odor responses was completely reversed by 100 microM nifedipine, suggesting that D2 receptor activation leads to an inhibition of L-type Ca2+ channels in ORNs. In addition, dopamine reversibly reduced ORN excitability as evidenced by reduced amplitude and frequency of Ca2+ transients in response to elevated K(+), which activates voltage-gated Ca2+ channels in ORNs. As with the suppression of odor responses, the effects of dopamine on ORN excitability were blocked by the D2 dopamine receptor antagonist sulpiride (<500 microM). The observation of dopaminergic modulation of odor-induced Ca2+ transients in ORNs adds to the growing body of work showing that olfactory receptor neurons can be modulated at the periphery. Dopamine concentrations in nasal mucus increase in response to noxious stimuli, and thus D2 receptor-mediated suppression of voltage-gated Ca2+ channels may be a novel neuroprotective mechanism for ORNs.  相似文献   

6.
The mechanism by which dopamine induces or facilitates neurohypophysial hormone release is not completely understood. Because oxytocin- and vasopressin-secreting supraoptic neurons are under the control of a prominent GABAergic inhibition, we investigated the possibility that dopamine exerts its action by modulating GABA-mediated transmission. Whole cell voltage-clamp recordings of supraoptic neurons were carried out in acute hypothalamic slices to determine the action of dopamine on inhibitory postsynaptic currents. Application of dopamine caused a consistent and reversible reduction in the frequency, but not the amplitude, of miniature synaptic events, indicating that dopamine was acting presynaptically to reduce GABAergic transmission. The subtype of dopamine receptor involved in this response was characterized pharmacologically. Dopamine inhibitory action was greatly reduced by two highly selective D4 receptor antagonists L745,870 and L750,667 and to a lower extent by the antipsychotic drug clozapine but was unaffected by SCH 23390 and sulpiride, D1/D5 and D2/D3 receptor antagonists, respectively. In agreement with these results, the action of dopamine was mimicked by the potent D4 receptor agonist PD168077 but not by SKF81297 and bromocriptine, D1/D5 and D2/D3 receptor agonists, respectively. Dopamine and PD168077 also reduced the amplitude of evoked inhibitory postsynaptic currents, an effect that was accompanied by an increase in paired-pulse facilitation. These data clearly indicate that D4 receptors are located on GABA terminals in the supraoptic nucleus and that their activation reduces GABA release in the supraoptic nucleus. Therefore dopaminergic facilitation of neurohypophysial hormone release appears to result, at least in part, from disinhibition of magnocellular neurons caused by the depression of GABAergic transmission.  相似文献   

7.
Olfactory bulb (OB) of mammals contains a large population of dopaminergic interneurons within the glomerular layer. Dopamine has been shown in vivo to modulate several aspects of olfactory information processing. The dopamine receptors of olfactory bulb and mucosa are assessed here at the levels of mRNAs and radioligand binding sites with presently available tools. D1A mRNA was found in OB glomerular-, plexiform-, mitral-cell and granular layers, but not in olfactory mucosa. D1B mRNA was absent in olfactory bulb and mucosa. D1-like binding sites were detected with two distinct radioligands, in glomerular-, plexiform-, mitral cell- and granular layers of OB but not in olfactory mucosa. We thus demonstrate the previously doubtful presence of D1-like receptors in OB. D2 mRNAs were localized in the glomerular and granular layers of OB and in olfactory mucosa; lesser amounts of D3 mRNAs were found in OB glomerular and granular layer, but not in olfactory mucosa. No D4 mRNA was detected in either structure. High densities of D2-like, [125I]Iodosulpride-labelled binding sites, were revealed within lamina propria of olfactory mucosa, and confirmed in the olfactory nerve- and glomerular layers of OB. A faint but significant density of [3H]7-hydroxy-dipropyl-aminotetralin (OH-DPAT) labelled, D3 binding sites was detected in olfactory nerve- and glomerular layers of OB, but not in olfactory mucosa. Competition of [125I]Iodosulpride specific binding by three D2/D3 selective drugs yielded kinetics typical of the D2 receptor subtype in olfactory bulb and mucosa. Olfactory nerve- and glomerular layers of OB are proved thus to contain a predominant contingent of D2 receptors and a minor population of D3 receptors, while olfactory mucosa expresses only D2 receptors.  相似文献   

8.
We have employed in vitro physiological methods to investigate dopaminergic modulation of excitatory synaptic transmission in monkey prefrontal cortex (PFC) circuits. We show that combined activation of D1-like and D2-like dopamine receptors results in the reduction of extracellular stimulation-evoked isolated EPSCs in layer 3 pyramidal neurons. Using paired recordings from synaptically connected pyramidal neurons we have determined the basic properties of unitary synaptic connections between layer 3 pyramids in the primate PFC and, interestingly, we found that dopamine does not reduce synaptic transmission between nearby pairs of synaptically coupled PFC pyramidal neurons. This input specificity may be a critical aspect of the dopaminergic regulation of recurrent excitatory circuits in the PFC.  相似文献   

9.
Bouron A  Reuter H 《Neuroscience》1999,94(4):1063-1070
The present study was undertaken to better assess the role of dopamine on exocytosis. Since direct activation of adenylate cyclase (e.g., with forskolin) enhances neurotransmitter release it was of interest to see whether the activation of D1-type dopamine receptors, which are positively coupled to adenylate cyclase, could also modulate the molecular machinery underlying the fusion of synaptic vesicles and the release of neurotransmitter. To answer this question we have looked at the effect of the D1-type dopamine receptor agonist SKF-38393 on the spontaneous release of glutamate from cultured rat hippocampal neurons. SKF-38393 enhanced the frequency but not the amplitude of tetrodotoxin-resistant excitatory postsynaptic currents which argues for a presynaptic locus of D1 action. This effect was blocked by the D1-dopaminergic receptor antagonist SCH-23390 and the protein kinase A inhibitors H-7 and Rp-cAMP whereas pertussis toxin failed to affect the dopaminergic response. In addition, carbachol and Ruthenium Red also stimulated exocytosis but did not occlude the SKF-38393-induced modulation. These results indicate that SKF-38393 presynaptically enhances the release of glutamate via a pertussis toxin-insensitive and protein kinase A-dependent mechanism, which most likely involves D1-type dopamine receptors. Our results underline the importance of protein kinase A as potent modulator of synaptic transmission and suggest that high concentrations of dopamine can greatly enhance the release of glutamate in the hippocampus.  相似文献   

10.
The vertebrate retina receives centrifugal input from the brain. In zebrafish, the major centrifugal input originates in the terminal nerve (TN). TN cell bodies are located in the olfactory bulb and ventral telencephalon. The TN projects axons to the retina where they branch in the inner plexiform layer (IPL) and synapse onto several inner retinal cell types, including dopaminergic interplexiform cells (DA-IPCs). This olfactoretinal centrifugal input plays a role in modulating retinal ganglion cell (RGC) activity, probably via dopamine-mediated Ca2+ signalling pathways. Normally, dopamine inhibits RGC firing by decreasing the inward Ca2+ current. Olfactory stimulation with amino acids decreases dopamine release in the retina, thereby reducing dopaminergic inhibition of RGCs. This model of olfacto-visual integration was directly tested by recording single-unit RGC activity in response to olfactory stimulation in the presence or absence of dopamine receptor blockers. Stimulation of the olfactory neurones increased RGC activity. However, this effect diminished when the dopamine D1 receptors were pharmacologically blocked. In isolated RGCs, the application of dopamine or a dopamine D1 receptor agonist decreased voltage-activated Ca2+ current and lowered Ca2+ influx. Together, the data suggest that olfactory input has a modulatory effect on RGC firing, and that this effect is mediated by dopamine D1 receptor-coupled Ca2+ signalling pathways.  相似文献   

11.
Synaptic plasticity in the striatum is a key mechanism that underlies processes such as reward related incentive learning and behavioral habit formation resulting from drugs of abuse. Key aspects of these functions are dependent on dopamine transmission as well as activation of calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase IIα (CaMKIIα). In this study, we examined the ability of a recently identified heteromeric complex composed of D1 and D2 dopamine receptors coupled to Gq/11 to activate striatal CaMKIIα. Using the dopaminergic agonist SKF83959, which selectively activates the D1-D2 complex, we demonstrated phosphorylation of CaMKIIα at threonine 286, both in heterologous cells and in the murine striatum in vivo. Phosphorylation of CaMKIIα by activation of the receptor complex required concurrent agonism of both D1 and D2 receptors and was independent of receptor pathways that modulated adenylyl cyclase. The identification of this novel mechanism by which dopamine may modulate synaptic plasticity has implications for our understanding of striatal-mediated reward and motor function, as well as neuronal disorders in which striatal dopaminergic neurotransmission is involved.  相似文献   

12.
Reciprocally connected glutamatergic subthalamic nucleus (STN) and GABAergic external globus pallidus (GP) neurons normally exhibit weakly correlated, irregular activity but following the depletion of dopamine in Parkinson's disease they express more highly correlated, rhythmic bursting activity. Patch clamp recording was used to test the hypothesis that dopaminergic modulation reduces the capability of GABAergic inputs to pattern 'pathological' activity in STN neurons. Electrically evoked GABA(A) receptor-mediated IPSCs exhibited activity-dependent plasticity in STN neurons, i.e. IPSCs evoked at frequencies between 1 and 50 Hz exhibited depression that increased with the frequency of activity. Dopamine, the D(2)-like dopamine receptor agonist quinpirole and external media containing a low [Ca(2+)] reduced both the magnitude of IPSCs evoked at 1-50 Hz and synaptic depression at 10-50 Hz. Dopamine/quinpirole also reduced the frequency but not the amplitude of miniature IPSCs recorded in the presence of tetrodotoxin. D(1)-like and D(4) agonists were ineffective and D(2/3) but not D4 receptor antagonists reversed the effects of dopamine or quinpirole. Together these data suggest that presynaptic D(2/3) dopamine receptors modulate the short-term dynamics of GABAergic transmission in the STN by lowering the initial probability of transmitter release. Simulated GABA(A) receptor-mediated synaptic conductances representative of control or modulated transmission were then generated in STN neurons using the dynamic clamp technique. Dopamine-modulated transmission was less effective at resetting autonomous activity or generating rebound burst firing than control transmission. The data therefore support the conclusion that dopamine acting at presynaptic D(2)-like receptors reduces the propensity for GABAergic transmission to generate correlated, bursting activity in STN neurons.  相似文献   

13.
The medium spiny neurons of the nucleus accumbens receive both an excitatory glutamatergic input from forebrain and a dopaminergic input from the ventral tegmental area. This integration point may constitute a locus whereby the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA)-subtype of glutamate receptors promotes drug reinforcement. Here we investigate how dopaminergic inputs alter the ethanol sensitivity of NMDA receptors in rats and mice and report that previous dopamine receptor-1 (D1) activation, culminating in dopamine and cAMP-regulated phosphoprotein-32 kD (DARPP-32) and NMDA receptor subunit-1 (NR1)-NMDA receptor phosphorylation, strongly decreases ethanol inhibition of NMDA responses. The regulation of ethanol sensitivity of NMDA receptors by D1 receptors was absent in DARPP-32 knockout mice. We propose that DARPP-32 mediated blunting of the response to ethanol subsequent to activation of ventral tegmental area dopaminergic neurons initiates molecular alterations that influence synaptic plasticity in this circuit, thereby promoting the development of ethanol reinforcement.  相似文献   

14.
D A Wilson  J G Wood 《Neuroscience》1992,49(1):183-192
Unilateral olfactory deprivation in the rat profoundly modifies olfactory bulb anatomy, chemistry and function. The present report examined the time-course of the functional effects of unilateral deprivation on inhibition in the olfactory bulb using paired-pulse stimulation of the lateral olfactory tract and olfactory nerve. In addition, an attempt was made to correlate these physiological measures with olfactory bulb dopamine and norepinephrine levels and tyrosine hydroxylase immunoreactivity. Deprivation from postnatal day 1 to postnatal day 20 or postnatal day 40 significantly enhanced lateral olfactory tract paired-pulse depression, while late onset deprivation (postnatal day 20) had no effect. Olfactory nerve paired-pulse depression was enhanced by 40 days of deprivation regardless of the age at onset. The time-course of these deprivation-induced physiological changes did not correlate well with reductions in dopamine. Dopamine levels were reduced in all deprivation conditions by 70-80% compared with control bulbs. Norepinephrine content was slightly elevated in deprived bulbs. These results suggest that early olfactory deprivation modifies olfactory bulb synaptic activity and further, as with other sensory systems, these effects are age and duration dependent.  相似文献   

15.
The interaction between dopaminergic and cholinergic systems in the mammalian central nervous system, which is thought to have important implications in the pathophysiology of major extrapyramidal disorders, has never been adequately demonstrated in vivo. Renshaw cell burst responses to single electrical shocks to lumbar ventral roots in spinalized and decerebrated rats were studied. In this monosynaptic cholinergic pathway, apomorphine, a dopaminergic receptor agonist, inhibited whereas the D2-antagonist sulpiride facilitated the burst responses. The mutual antagonism of the two drugs and the depression coupled with the faster decay of post-tetanic potentiation of Renshaw cells by apomorphine demonstrate the involvement of presynaptic D2-receptors through which dopamine can modulate acetylcholine-mediated central synaptic transmission in vivo. The study also provides further evidence for the involvement of the spinal cord in extrapyramidal disorders.  相似文献   

16.
Long-term changes of synaptic transmission following brief trains of high-frequency stimulation of excitatory pathways in the brain have attracted attention as a possible correlate of memory. In the cerebellum, concurrent activation of parallel fibers and climbing fibers leads to a long-term depression (LTD) of synaptic transmission, which may be the cellular substrate of motor learning in this structure. We report here for the first time that high-frequency stimulation of corticostriatal glutamatergic fibers in the striatum, another brain structure strongly involved in motor control, also induces LTD of synaptic transmission. Induction of striatal LTD is blocked either by SCH 23390, a D1 dopamine (DA) receptor antagonist or by L-sulpiride, a D2 DA receptor antagonist. The lesion of the nigrostriatal DAergic pathway abolishes LTD. After DA depletion, LTD can be restored by the application of exogenous DA. LTD can also be restored by coadministration of D1 and D2 DA receptor agonists, but not by the application of a single class of DA agonists alone. Our data show that coactivation of D1 and D2 DA receptors is required for LTD in the striatum. D1/D2 receptor cooperation in the induction of LTD may play a crucial role in the behavioural function of DA and in the therapeutic effects of DA agonists in Parkinson's disease.  相似文献   

17.
Joyce MP  Rayport S 《Neuroscience》2000,99(3):445-456
The mesoaccumbens projection, formed by ventral tegmental area dopamine neurons synapsing on nucleus accumbens gamma-aminobutyric acid neurons, has been implicated in the pathogenesis of schizophrenia and drug addiction. Despite intensive study, the nature of the signal conveyed by dopamine neurons has not been fully resolved. In addition to several slower, dopamine-mediated, modulatory actions, several lines of evidence suggest that dopamine neurons have fast excitatory actions. To test this, we placed dopamine neurons together with accumbens neurons in microcultures. Surprisingly, most dopamine neurons made excitatory recurrent connections (autapses), which provided a basis for their identification; accumbens gamma-aminobutyric acid neurons were identified by their distinctive size. In 75% of mesoaccumbens cell pairs, stimulation of the dopamine neuron evoked a glutamate-mediated, excitatory synaptic response in the accumbens neuron. Immunostaining revealed dopamine neuron varicosities that were predominantly dopaminergic, ones that were predominantly glutamatergic, and ones that were both dopaminergic and glutamatergic. Despite close appositions of both glutamatergic and dopaminergic varicosities to the dendrites of accumbens neurons, only glutamatergic synaptic responses were seen. In the majority of cell pairs, pharmacologic activation of D2-type dopamine receptors inhibited glutamatergic responses, presumably via immunocytochemically-visualized presynaptic D2 receptors. In some cell pairs, the evoked autaptic and synaptic responses were discordant, suggesting that D2 receptors may be differentially trafficked to different presynaptic varicosities.Thus, dopamine neurons appear to mediate both slow dopaminergic and fast glutamatergic actions via separate sets of synapses. Together with evidence for glutamate cotransmission in serotonergic raphe neurons and noradrenergic locus coeruleus neurons, these results add a new dimension to monoamine neuron signaling that may have important implications for neuropsychiatric disorders.  相似文献   

18.
Dopamine depletion impairs precursor cell proliferation in Parkinson disease   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
Cerebral dopamine depletion is the hallmark of Parkinson disease. Because dopamine modulates ontogenetic neurogenesis, depletion of dopamine might affect neural precursors in the subependymal zone and subgranular zone of the adult brain. Here we provide ultrastructural evidence showing that highly proliferative precursors in the adult subependymal zone express dopamine receptors and receive dopaminergic afferents. Experimental depletion of dopamine in rodents decreases precursor cell proliferation in both the subependymal zone and the subgranular zone. Proliferation is restored completely by a selective agonist of D2-like (D2L) receptors. Experiments with neural precursors from the adult subependymal zone grown as neurosphere cultures confirm that activation of D2L receptors directly increases the proliferation of these precursors. Consistently, the numbers of proliferating cells in the subependymal zone and neural precursor cells in the subgranular zone and olfactory bulb are reduced in postmortem brains of individuals with Parkinson disease. These observations suggest that the generation of neural precursor cells is impaired in Parkinson disease as a consequence of dopaminergic denervation.  相似文献   

19.
Dopaminergic mechanisms were Anatyzed in an isolated preparation of the turtle olfactory bulb. Field potentials were evoked by antidromic or orthodromic stimulation, and the effects determined of pharmacological manipulations of the bathing medium. In the presence of dopamine or a dopamine agonist, apomorphine, there was a reduction of amplitude and delay of onset of the component of the field potentials due to granule cell responses; fluphenazine, a dopamine antagonist, had generally opposite effects. Using paired volleys, it was found that the suppression of the response to the second test volley was reduced in the presence of dopamine or apomorphine, but enhanced in the presence of fluphenazine.The most likely explanation of these results is that exogenous dopamine depresses the response of mitral cells, which in turn decreases the dendrodendritic synaptic excitation of granule cells and reduces their inhibitory feedback onto mitral cells. This suggests that the dopaminergic cells in the bulb may suppress mitral cells by modulating excitable mechanisms in the mitral dendritic membrane, or modulating long-lasting synaptic potentials.  相似文献   

20.
The olfactory bulb is critically involved in early olfactory learning. In this study, we examined the effect of intrabulbar infusion of ritanserin, a 5-hydroxytryptamine(2) (5-HT(2)) receptor antagonist on a one-trial aversive olfactory learning in young rats. Ritanserin, a 5-HT(2) receptor antagonist, was continuously infused into the olfactory bulb of postnatal day-11 (PND 11) rat pups during a 30-min training session of pairing citral odor and foot shock. On the following day, the time spent in the part of the apparatus where the odor was present was measured as an index of odor aversion. Consistent with a previous study on olfactory preference learning, 1 nM ritanserin, but not 10 nM, blocked the olfactory aversive learning. We further examined the ability of 10 nM ritanserin to induce olfactory learning in the absence of the unconditioned stimulus foot shock. Pups that received intrabulbar infusion of 10 nM ritanserin in the presence of citral odor developed an aversion to the odor without foot shock. Since ritanserin has been shown to have an affinity for dopamine receptors, we examined the effect of dopamine antagonists on the ritanserin-induced aversive olfactory learning. Co-infusion of the dopamine D(1) receptor antagonist (+/-)-SKF-83566 with ritanserin dose-dependently prevented induced learning. In contrast, the D(2) receptor antagonist spiperone was without effect. These results extend the previous finding on the role of bulbar 5-HT(2) receptors in early olfactory learning and suggest that high concentration of ritanserin facilitates aversive olfactory learning through D(1) receptors in the olfactory bulb.  相似文献   

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