D-2 dopamine-receptors regulate the release of [3H]dopamine in rat cortical regions showing dopamine immunoreactive fibers

1987 
Abstract Using an antibody raised against dopamine the occurrence of dopamine-containing fibers was demonstrated in the prefrontal cortex, anterior cingulate cortex, parietal neocortex, piriform cortex and entorhinal cortex. In extracts of these cortical regions significant amounts of dopamine, although approximately a 100-fold less than in the neostriatum or nucleus accumbens, were detected with high performance liquid chromatography. The release of [ 3 H]dopamine from slices of all these cortical regions was studied in vitro in a superfusion system and desipramine was used to prevent the uptake of [ 3 H]dopamine in noradrenergic nerve terminals. It appeared that the electrically evoked release of radioactivity was inhibited by drugs stimulating D-2 dopamine-receptors in all the regions studied. Cation-exchange column chromatography revealed that the radioactivity released consisted predominantly of [ 3 H]dopamine, indicating that D-2 receptors mediate the inhibition of the release of [ 3 H]dopamine from dopaminergic nerve terminals. Likewise, in the neostriatum as well as in the nucleus accumbens D-2 receptor stimulation inhibits the release of [ 3 H]dopamine. Therefore it is our conclusion that D-2 receptors regulate the release of dopamine from dopaminergic neurons originating in the ventral tegmental area as well as in the substantia nigra.
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