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Autoreceptor-mediated changes in dopaminergic terminal excitability: Effects of striatal drug infusions
Authors:James M. Tepper   Shoji Nakamura   Stephen J. Young  Philip M. Groves  
Affiliation:Department of Anatomy, St. Louis University School of Medicine, 1402 South Grand Boulevard, St. Louis, MO 63104, U.S.A.
Abstract:The neurophysiological correlates of autoinhibition at the terminals of nigrostriatal dopaminergic neurons were studied by measuring the changes in antidromic excitability of nigrostriatal neurons following local infusions of various catecholamine agonists and antagonists into the neostriatum. Infusions of apomorphine or amphetamine reduced terminal excitability whereas the dopamine antagonists, haloperidol, fluphenazine or sulpiride, led to increases in terminal excitability. Alterations in antidromic excitability were constrained to the terminal regions and were not observed when infusions and excitability testing were performed in the medial forebrain bundle. The alpha-2 agonist, clonidine, did not alter dopaminergic terminal excitability. Our results indicate that pharmacological manipulations which have been shown to reduce the amount of stimulation-induced transmitter release from dopaminergic terminals are associated with a dopamine autoreceptor-mediated hyperpolarization and/or alteration in ionic conductance of the terminal membranes. These results are discussed with respect to mechanisms of autoinhibition in the central nervous system.
Keywords:dopamine   autoreceptor   substantia nigra   neostriatum   antidromic excitability   amphetamine   transmitter release   presynaptic receptors
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