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1.
Presynaptic nicotinic acetylcholine receptors on striatal nerve terminals modulate the release of dopamine. We have compared the effects of a number of nicotinic agonists and antagonists on a perfused synaptosome preparation preloaded with [3H]dopamine. (-)-Nicotine, acetylcholine, and the nicotinic agonists cytisine and 1,1-dimethyl-4-phenylpiperazinium iodide (DMPP), at micromolar concentrations, stimulated the release of [3H]dopamine from striatal nerve terminals. Carbamylcholine was a much weaker agonist. The actions of (-)-nicotine, cytisine, and DMPP were inhibited by low concentrations of the nicotinic antagonists dihydro-beta-erythroidine, mecamylamine, pempidine, and neosurugatoxin; alpha-bungarotoxin was without effect, and extending the time of exposure to this toxin resulted in only very modest inhibition. This pharmacology points to a specific nicotinic receptor mechanism that is clearly distinct from that at the neuromuscular junction. Atropine failed to antagonise the effects of acetylcholine and carbamylcholine, suggesting that no muscarinic component is involved. The nicotinic receptor ligands (-)-[3H]nicotine and 125I-alpha-bungarotoxin bound to specific sites enriched in the synaptosome preparation. Drugs tested on the perfused synaptosomes were examined for their ability to interact with these two ligand binding sites in brain membranes. The differential sensitivity to the neurotoxins alpha-bungarotoxin and neosurugatoxin of the 125I-alpha-bungarotoxin and (-)-[3H]nicotine binding sites, respectively, leads to a tentative correlation of the (-)-[3H]nicotine site with the presynaptic nicotinic receptor on striatal nerve terminals.  相似文献   

2.
The beta2 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor subunit null mutation eliminated most high affinity [(3) H]epibatidine binding in mouse brain, but significant binding remained in accessory olfactory nucleus, medial habenula, inferior colliculus and interpeduncular nucleus. Residual [(125) I]epibatidine binding sites in the inferior colliculus and interpeduncular nucleus were subsequently characterized. Inhibition of [(125) I]epibatidine binding by 12 agonists and six antagonists was very similar in these regions. Most acetylcholine-stimulated (86) Rb(+) efflux is eliminated in thalamus and superior colliculus of beta2 null mutants, but significant activity remained in inferior colliculus and interpeduncular nucleus. This residual activity was subsequently characterized. The 12 nicotinic agonists tested elicited concentration-dependent (86) Rb(+) efflux. Epibatidine was the most potent agonist. Cytisine was also potent and efficacious. EC(50) values for quaternary agonists were relatively high. Cytisine-stimulated (86) Rb(+) efflux was inhibited by six classical nicotinic antagonists. Mecamylamine and D-tubocurarine were most potent, while decamethonium was the least potent. Agonists and antagonists exhibited similar potency in both brain regions. Alpha-bungarotoxin (100 nm) did not significantly inhibit cytisine-stimulated (86) Rb(+) efflux, while the alpha3beta4 selective antagonist, alphaConotoxinAuIB, inhibited a significant fraction of the response in both brain regions. Thus, beta2 null mutant mice express residual nicotinic activity with properties resembling those of alpha3beta4*-nAChR.  相似文献   

3.
The existence on glutamatergic nerve endings of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) mediating enhancement of glutamate release has often been suggested but not demonstrated directly. Here, we study the effects of nAChR agonists on [3 H]-d-aspartate ([3 H]-d-ASP) release from synaptosomes superfused in conditions known to prevent indirect effects. Nicotinic receptor agonists, while unable to modify the basal [3 H]-d-ASP release from human neocortex or rat striatal synaptosomes, enhanced the Ca2+ -dependent exocytotic release evoked by K+ (12 mm) depolarization. Their rank order of potency were anatoxin-a > epibatidine > nicotine > ACh (+ atropine). The anatoxin-a effect, both in human and rat synaptosomes, was antagonized by mecamylamine, alpha-bungarotoxin or methyllycaconitine. The basal release of [3 H]ACh from human cortical synaptosomes was increased by (-)-nicotine (EC50 = 1.16 +/- 0.33 microm) or by ACh plus atropine (EC50 = 2.0 +/- 0.04 microm). The effect of ACh plus atropine was insensitive to alpha-bungarotoxin, methyllycaconitine or alpha-conotoxin MII, whereas it was totally antagonized by mecamylamine or dihydro-beta-erythroidine. To conclude, glutamatergic axon terminals in human neocortex and in rat striatum possess alpha7* nicotinic heteroreceptors mediating enhancement of glutamate release. Release-enhancing cholinergic autoreceptors in human neocortex are nAChRs with a pharmacological profile compatible with the alpha4beta2 subunit combination.  相似文献   

4.
Potassium chloride (25 mM) and (+)-amphetamine (100 microM) both stimulated the release of radioactivity from slices of substantia nigra preincubated with [3H]3,4-dihydroxyphenylethylamine [( 3H]dopamine). Potassium chloride (25 mM) released radioactivity from slices of both zona compacta and zona reticulata. Prior 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) lesions of one nigrostriatal pathway did not reduce the spontaneous release of radioactivity, or the potassium chloride- or amphetamine-induced release of radioactivity from slices of nigra ipsilateral to the lesion after preincubation with [3H]dopamine. The accumulation of radioactivity following incubation of nigral slices from 6-OHDA-lesioned animals with [3H]dopamine was increased when compared to uptake into slices from intact tissue. In synaptosomal preparations of striatum, nomifensine but not desipramine or fluoxetine inhibited [3H]dopamine uptake. In contrast, nomifensine, desipramine, and fluoxetine all inhibited [3H]dopamine uptake in nigral synaptosomal preparations. Following 6-OHDA lesions of one nigrostriatal pathway the uptake of [3H]dopamine into nigral synaptosomal preparations was unchanged but uptake into striatal preparations was substantially decreased. In contrast, bilateral electrolesions of the dorsal and medial raphe nuclei reduced [3H]dopamine uptake into nigral preparations but not into striatal synaptosomes. The uptake of [3H]5-hydroxytryptamine ([3H]5-HT) into synaptosomal preparations of substantia nigra was abolished by fluoxetine and reduced by desipramine, but was unaffected by nomifensine. In contrast, fluoxetine, desipramine, and nomifensine all inhibited [3H]5-HT uptake into striatal synaptosomal preparations. Following 6-OHDA lesions of one nigro-striatal pathway the uptake of [3H]5-HT into nigral synaptosomal preparations was unchanged but uptake into striatal preparations was reduced.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
It is known that nicotine can activate several subtypes of release-regulating presynaptic nicotinic receptors (nAChRs) including those situated on central noradrenergic, dopaminergic, cholinergic and glutamatergic axon terminals. The objective of this study was to investigate the effects of chronic administration of (-)nicotine on the function of the above autoreceptors and heteroreceptors using rat superfused synaptosomes. In hippocampal synaptosomes prelabelled with [3H]noradrenaline (NA) the nicotine-evoked overflow of [3H]NA was higher in rats treated with nicotine for 10 days (via osmotic mini-pumps) than in vehicle-treated rats. In striatal synaptosomes, prelabelled with [3H]dopamine (DA), chronic nicotine did not modify the releasing effect of nicotine. No significant change was observed in experiments with synaptosomes from nucleus accumbens prelabelled with [3H]DA. Exposure of hippocampal synaptosomes prelabelled with [3H]choline to nicotine elicited release of [3H]acetylcholine; this effect was almost abolished in synaptosomes from animals administered nicotine for 10 days, suggesting down-regulation of nicotinic autoreceptors. In hippocampal synaptosomes prelabelled with [3H]D-aspartate, the releasing effect of epibatidine following chronic nicotine treatment did not differ from that in controls. The K+-evoked exocytotic release of the neurotransmitters tested was not modified by long-term nicotine administration. The results show that chronic nicotine differentially affects the function of release-regulating nAChR subtypes.  相似文献   

6.
It has previously been shown that nicotine-evoked dopamine release from rat striatal synaptosomes and nicotine-evoked norepinephrine release from hippocampal synaptosomes are mediated by distinct nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) subtypes. In the present study, the functional association of these nicotinic receptors with specific subtypes of voltage-gated calcium channels was examined. Cd(2+) (200 microM), as well as omega-conotoxin MVIIC (5 microM), blocks approximately 85% of nicotine-evoked dopamine release from striatal synaptosomes, indicating a major involvement of calcium channels. Furthermore, the toxin-susceptibility suggests that these calcium channels contain alpha(1A) and/or alpha(1B) subunits. Inhibition of nicotine-evoked dopamine release by conotoxins alpha-MII and omega-GVIA is additive and indicates that presynaptic alpha3beta2 nAChRs are functionally coupled to alpha(1A), but not alpha(1B), calcium channel subtypes. Conversely, insensitivity to alpha-AuIB and sensitivity to omega-MVIIC indicate that non-alpha3beta2/alpha3beta4-containing nAChRs are functionally coupled to alpha(1B)-containing calcium channels. In contrast, Cd(2+) blocks only 65% of nicotine-evoked norepinephrine release from hippocampal synaptosomes, indicating that a substantial fraction of this release occurs through mechanisms not involving calcium channels. This Cd(2+)-insensitive component of release is blocked by alpha-AuIB and therefore appears to be triggered by Ca(2+) flowing directly through the channels of presynaptic alpha3beta4 nAChRs. Thus, these data indicate that different presynaptic termini can have distinctive functional associations of specific nAChRs and voltage-gated calcium channels.  相似文献   

7.
This study establishes that presynaptic nicotinic receptors modulate dopamine release in the mouse striatum. Nicotinic agonists elicit a dose-dependent increase in the release of [3H]dopamine from synaptosomes prepared from mouse striatum. At low concentrations, this release is Ca2+ dependent, whereas at higher concentrations Ca(2+)-independent, mecamylamine-insensitive release was also observed. The Ca(2+)-dependent nicotine-evoked release was not blocked by alpha-bungarotoxin but was effectively blocked by neuronal bungarotoxin as well as several other nicotinic receptor antagonists. The relationship between potency for stimulation of release for agonists and potency for inhibition of release for antagonists was compared to the affinity of these compounds for the [3H]nicotine binding site. The overall correlation between release and binding potency was not high, but the drugs may be classified into separate groups, each of which has a high correlation with binding. This finding suggests either that more than one nicotinic receptor regulates dopamine release or that not all agonists interact with the same receptor in an identical fashion.  相似文献   

8.
Presynaptic alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazole propionate (AMPA)/kainate receptors mediating hippocampal [(3)H]noradrenaline or [(3)H]serotonin release, striatal [(3)H]dopamine release and cortical [(3)H]acetylcholine release were pharmacologically characterized using several AMPA/kainate receptor antagonists. The releases of the four transmitters elicited by exposing synaptosomes to AMPA were antagonized by NBQX, indicating that they reflect AMPA/kainate receptor activation. GYKI52466 did not inhibit the AMPA-induced release of [(3)H]noradrenaline, [(3)H]dopamine or [(3)H]serotonin, while it weakly affected the AMPA-mediated release of [(3)H]acetylcholine. On the contrary, LY300164 and LY303070 were potent antagonists able to discriminate among AMPA/kainate receptor subtypes. Both compounds blocked the AMPA receptors mediating [(3)H]dopamine and [(3)H]acetylcholine release. However, LY303070, but not LY300164, inhibited the AMPA-induced release of [(3)H]noradrenaline, while the AMPA-mediated [(3)H]serotonin release was sensitive to LY300164 but not to LY303070. SYM2206 mimicked LY300164 and prevented the AMPA-induced release of [(3)H]dopamine, [(3)H]acetylcholine and [(3)H]serotonin, but not that of [(3)H]noradrenaline. NS102 failed to antagonize the AMPA-induced release of all four transmitters. LY293558 prevented the AMPA-mediated release of [(3)H]noradrenaline, [(3)H]dopamine, [(3)H]acetylcholine or [(3)H]serotonin. Differently, LY377770 did not inhibit the AMPA-mediated release of [(3)H]noradrenaline and [(3)H]acetylcholine, but it potently blocked the AMPA-induced release of [(3)H]serotonin and, less so, of [(3)H]dopamine. AMOA inhibited the AMPA-induced release of [(3)H]serotonin or [(3)H]acetylcholine, but not that of [(3)H]noradrenaline or [(3)H]dopamine. GAMS prevented the AMPA-mediated release of [(3)H]acetylcholine and, more weakly, that of [(3)H]dopamine, but it failed to inhibit the release of [(3)H]noradrenaline or [(3)H]serotonin elicited by AMPA. gamma-DGG did not affect the AMPA-mediated release of any of the four transmitters studied. In conclusion, based on the antagonist profiles obtained, the four receptors here analyzed all belong to the AMPA-preferring subclass of glutamate receptors; however, they appear to differ from each other, probably due to differences in subunit composition. The compounds LY300164, LY303070, LY377770, AMOA and GAMS may be useful to discriminate among AMPA-preferring receptor subtypes.  相似文献   

9.
A number of studies have found that the chronic administration of nicotine causes an increase in the density of nicotinic binding sites in the brain, but it is not known whether these additional binding sites are functionally active receptors. In this study, the effects of 1-week administration of the potent nicotinic agonist, (+)-anatoxin-a (96 nmol/day via osmotic minipumps), was assessed on [3H]nicotine binding and [3H]dopamine uptake and release in rat striatal synaptosomes. Chronic (+)-anatoxin-a treatment resulted in a 32% increase in the Bmax of [3H]nicotine binding in anatoxin-treated animals compared to control. There was a 43% increase in the activity of 3 microM nicotine to release [3H]dopamine from synaptosomes of anatoxin-treated animals, but the release induced by 20 mM K+ depolarization was unaffected. There was no effect of chronic (+)-anatoxin-a treatment on the uptake of [3H]dopamine. A strong positive correlation (r = 0.64) was found between the density of [3H]nicotine binding sites and the nicotine-induced stimulation of [3H]dopamine release in individual animals. These results indicate that (+)-anatoxin-a, like nicotine, produces an up-regulation of nicotine binding sites following chronic administration, and that these additional sites are functional receptors capable of mediating the release of dopamine from striatal synaptosomes.  相似文献   

10.
Mouse superficial superior colliculus (SuSC) contains dense GABAergic innervation and diverse nicotinic acetylcholine receptor subtypes. Pharmacological and genetic approaches were used to investigate the subunit compositions of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChR) expressed on mouse SuSC GABAergic terminals. [(125) I]-Epibatidine competition-binding studies revealed that the α3β2* and α6β2* nicotinic subtype-selective peptide α-conotoxin MII-blocked binding to 40 ± 5% of SuSC nAChRs. Acetylcholine-evoked [(3) H]-GABA release from SuSC crude synaptosomal preparations is calcium dependent, blocked by the voltage-sensitive calcium channel blocker, cadmium, and the nAChR antagonist mecamylamine, but is unaffected by muscarinic, glutamatergic, P2X and 5-HT3 receptor antagonists. Approximately 50% of nAChR-mediated SuSC [(3) H]-GABA release is inhibited by α-conotoxin MII. However, the highly α6β2*-subtype-selective α-conotoxin PIA did not affect [(3) H]-GABA release. Nicotinic subunit-null mutant mouse experiments revealed that ACh-stimulated SuSC [(3) H]-GABA release is entirely β2 subunit-dependent. α4 subunit deletion decreased total function by >90%, and eliminated α-conotoxin MII-resistant release. ACh-stimulated SuSC [(3) H]-GABA release was unaffected by β3, α5 or α6 nicotinic subunit deletions. Together, these data suggest that a significant proportion of mouse SuSC nicotinic agonist-evoked GABA-release is mediated by a novel, α-conotoxin MII-sensitive α3α4β2 nAChR. The remaining α-conotoxin MII-resistant, nAChR agonist-evoked SuSC GABA release appears to be mediated via α4β2* subtype nAChRs.  相似文献   

11.
Abstract: The presynaptic nicotinic modulation of dopamine release from striatal nerve terminals is well established, but the subtype(s) of neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) underlying this response has not been identified. Recently, α-conotoxin-MII has been reported to inhibit potently and selectively the rat α3/β2 combination of nAChR subunits. Here we have synthesised the peptide, confirmed its specificity, and examined its effect on the (±)-anatoxin-a-evoked release of [3H]dopamine from rat striatal synaptosomes and slices. α-Conotoxin-MII (112 nM) completely blocked acetylcholine-evoked currents of α3β2 nAChRs expressed in Xenopus oocytes (IC50 = 8.0 ± 1.1 nM). Pairwise combinations of other nicotinic subunits were not blocked by 112 nMα-conotoxin-MII. On perfused striatal synaptosomes and slices, α-conotoxin-MII dose-dependently inhibited [3H]dopamine release evoked by 1 µM (±)-anatoxin-a with IC50 values of 24.3 ± 2.9 and 17.3 ± 0.1 nM, respectively. The dose-response curve was shifted to the right with increasing agonist concentrations. However, the maximal inhibition of responses achieved by α-conotoxin-MII (112 nM) was 44.9 ± 5.4% for synaptosomes and 25.0 ± 4.1% for slices, compared with an inhibition by 10 µM mecamylamine of 77.9 ± 3.7 and 88.0 ± 2.1%, respectively. These results suggest the presence of presynaptic α3β2-like nAChRs on striatal dopaminergic terminals, but the incomplete block of (±)-anatoxin-a-evoked [3H]dopamine release by α-conotoxin-MII also supports the participation of nAChRs composed of other subunits. The lower inhibition found in slices is consistent with an additional indirect nicotinic stimulation of dopamine release via an α-conotoxin-MII-insensitive nAChR.  相似文献   

12.
It has been proposed that (-)-nicotine can activate release-stimulating presynaptic nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) on glutamatergic nerve terminals to release glutamate, which in turn stimulates the release of noradrenaline (NA) and dopamine (DA) via presynaptic ionotropic glutamate receptors on catecholaminergic terminals. The objective of this study was to compare the function of N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) and alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methylisoxazide-4-propionic acid (AMPA) glutamate receptors in synaptosomes of rat hippocampus and striatum following acute and chronic (-)-nicotine administration. In hippocampal synaptosomes, prelabeled with [3H]NA, both the NMDA- and AMPA-evoked releases were higher in (-)-nicotine-treated (10 days) than in (-)-nicotine-treated (1 day) or vehicle-treated (1 or 10 days) rats. In striatal synaptosomes prelabeled with [3H]DA, the NMDA-evoked, but not the AMPA-evoked, release of [3H]DA was higher in (-)-nicotine-treated (10 days) than in nicotine-treated (1 day) or vehicle-treated (1 or 10 days) animals. Chronic (-)-nicotine did not affect catecholamine uptake, basal release and release evoked by high-K+ depolarization. Thus, chronic exposure to nicotine enhances the function of ionotropic glutamate receptors mediating noradrenaline release in the hippocampus and dopamine release in the striatum.  相似文献   

13.
The effects of nicotine and 1,1-dimethyl-4-phenylpiperazinium (DMPP) on the release of newly synthesized [3H]acetylcholine in mouse cerebral cortical synaptosomes were examined. Nicotine and DMPP produced increases in [3H]acetylcholine release, over the level of spontaneous release, of 24% and 30%, respectively, of a maximum depolarization-induced release produced by 50 mM potassium. The maximum effect was achieved at a concentration of 1 X 10(-4) M for both agents. The time course of release indicated a slow onset of action, reaching a maximum effect at 15 min of incubation. Both nicotine and DMPP also produced a slightly greater release of total tritium, measured in the absence of cholinesterase inhibition, than of [3H]acetylcholine. The release induced by nicotine was completely antagonized by hexamethonium and was largely (58%) calcium-dependent. Nicotine also produced an increase in [3H]choline accumulation into synaptosomes. These results indicate that the nicotinic agonists nicotine and DMPP can produce a moderate enhancement of acetylcholine release by a receptor-mediated action on cholinergic nerve terminals in the central nervous system.  相似文献   

14.
The release of [3H]dopamine stimulated by depolarization with 15 mM KCl of superfused rat striatal synaptosomes was potentiated by acetylcholine through the activation of presynaptic muscarinic receptors. In contrast, acetylcholine did not potentiate the release of [3H]dopamine elicited by d-amphetamine nor that caused by the calcium ionophore A23187. The dopamine carrier blocker nomifensine prevented the releasing action of amphetamine but not that of acetylcholine. The results suggest that the activation of muscarinic receptors on dopamine terminals in the rat corpus striatum selectively affects the calcium-dependent depolarization-induced release of the [3H]catecholamine. Moreover, the [3H]dopamine release caused by acetylcholine seems to occur independently of the membrane dopamine carrier.  相似文献   

15.
NMDA receptors regulating hippocampal noradrenaline (NA) and striatal dopamine (DA) release have been compared using superfused synaptosomes prelabelled with the [(3)H]catecholamines. Both receptors mediated release augmentation when exposed to NMDA plus glycine. Quinolinic acid (100 microM or 1 mM) plus glycine (1 microM)-elicited [(3)H]NA, but not [(3)H]DA release. The NMDA (100 microM)-evoked release of [(3)H]NA and [(3)H]DA was similar and concentration-dependently enhanced by glycine or D-serine (0.1-1 microM); in contrast, the HIV-1 envelope protein gp120 potently (30-100 pM) enhanced the NMDA-evoked release of [(3)H]NA, but not that of [(3)H]DA. Gp120 also potentiated quinolinate-evoked [(3)H]NA release. Ifenprodil (0.1-0.5 microM) or CP-101,606 (0.1-10 microM) inhibited the NMDA plus glycine-evoked release of both [(3)H]catecholamines. Zinc (0.1-1 microM) was ineffective. Lowering external pH from 7.4 to 6.6 strongly inhibited the release of [(3)H]NA elicited by NMDA plus glycine, whereas the release of [(3)H]DA was unaffected. The protein kinase C inhibitors GF 109203X (0.1 microM) or H7 (10 microM) selectively prevented the effect of NMDA plus glycine on the release of [(3)H]NA. GF 109203X also blocked the release of [(3)H]NA induced by NMDA or quinolinate plus gp120. It is concluded that the hippocampal NMDA receptor and the striatal NMDA receptor are pharmacologically distinct native subtypes, possibly containing NR2B subunits but different splice variants of the NR1 subunit.  相似文献   

16.
Dopamine release is impaired in a mouse model of DYT1 dystonia   总被引:2,自引:1,他引:1  
Early onset torsion dystonia, the most common form of hereditary primary dystonia, is caused by a mutation in the TOR1A gene, which codes for the protein torsinA. This form of dystonia is referred to as DYT1. We have used a transgenic mouse model of DYT1 dystonia [human mutant-type (hMT)1 mice] to examine the effect of the mutant human torsinA protein on striatal dopaminergic function. Analysis of striatal tissue dopamine (DA) and metabolites using HPLC revealed no difference between hMT1 mice and their non-transgenic littermates. Pre-synaptic DA transporters were studied using in vitro autoradiography with [(3)H]mazindol, a ligand for the membrane DA transporter, and [(3)H]dihydrotetrabenazine, a ligand for the vesicular monoamine transporter. No difference in the density of striatal DA transporter or vesicular monoamine transporter binding sites was observed. Post-synaptic receptors were studied using [(3)H]SCH-23390, a ligand for D(1) class receptors, [(3)H]YM-09151-2 and a ligand for D(2) class receptors. There were again no differences in the density of striatal binding sites for these ligands. Using in vivo microdialysis in awake animals, we studied basal as well as amphetamine-stimulated striatal extracellular DA levels. Basal extracellular DA levels were similar, but the response to amphetamine was markedly attenuated in the hMT1 mice compared with their non-transgenic littermates (253 +/- 71% vs. 561 +/- 132%, p < 0.05, two-way anova). These observations suggest that the mutation in the torsinA protein responsible for DYT1 dystonia may interfere with transport or release of DA, but does not alter pre-synaptic transporters or post-synaptic DA receptors. The defect in DA release as observed may contribute to the abnormalities in motor learning as previously documented in this transgenic mouse model, and may contribute to the clinical symptoms of the human disorder.  相似文献   

17.
To investigate whether adaptive changes of glutamatergic transmission underlie dysfunction of the cholinergic system in experimental parkinsonism, the effects of group-II metabotropic glutamate and NMDA receptor ligands on acetylcholine release was studied in striatal slices and synaptosomes obtained from naive rats, 6-hydroxydopamine hemi-lesioned rats and 6-hydroxydopamine hemi-lesioned rats chronically treated with levodopa (L-DOPA) plus benserazide (non-dyskinetic). Group-II metabotropic glutamate receptor agonists LY354740, DCG-IV and L-CCG-I inhibited the electrically-evoked endogenous acetylcholine release from slices, while NMDA facilitated it. LY354740 also inhibited K+-evoked acetylcholine release from synaptosomes. LY354740-induced inhibition was prevented by the group-II metabotropic glutamate receptor antagonist LY341495. In hemi-parkinsonian rats, sensitivity towards LY354740 was reduced while that to NMDA was enhanced in the lesioned (denervated) compared with unlesioned striatum. Moreover, dizocilpine inhibited acetylcholine release in the lesioned compared with unlesioned striatum. Chronic treatment with L-DOPA normalized sensitivity towards glutamatergic agonists. We conclude that striatal dopamine denervation results in plastic changes at group-II metabotropic glutamate and NMDA receptors that may shift glutamatergic control of acetylcholine release towards facilitation. From a clinical perspective, L-DOPA and NMDA antagonists appear effective in counteracting overactivity of striatal cholinergic interneurones associated with Parkinson's disease.  相似文献   

18.
Clinical symptoms of Parkinson's disease only become evident after 70-80% reductions in striatal dopamine. To investigate the importance of pre-synaptic dopaminergic mechanisms in this compensation, we determined the effect of nigrostriatal damage on dopaminergic markers and function in primates. MPTP treatment resulted in a graded dopamine loss with moderate to severe declines in ventromedial striatum (approximately 60-95%) and the greatest reductions (approximately 95-99%) in dorsolateral striatum. A somewhat less severe pattern of loss was observed for striatal nicotinic receptor, tyrosine hydroxylase and vesicular monoamine transporter expression. Declines in striatal dopamine uptake and transporter sites were also less severe than the reduction in dopamine levels, with enhanced dopamine turnover in the dorsolateral striatum after lesioning. The greatest degree of adaptation occurred for nicotine-evoked [(3)H]dopamine release from striatal synaptosomes, which was relatively intact in ventromedial striatum after lesioning, despite > 50% declines in dopamine. This maintenance of evoked release was not due to compensatory alterations in nicotinic receptor characteristics. Rather, there appeared to be a generalized preservation of release processes in ventromedial striatum, with K(+)-evoked release also near control levels after lesioning. These combined compensatory mechanisms help explain the finding that Parkinson's disease symptomatology develops only with major losses of striatal dopamine.  相似文献   

19.
We have studied the neuromodulatory effects of three synthetic peptides, structurally related to chromatin-derived acidic peptides (ACPs): ACP-1 (Asp-Asp-Ser-Asp-Glu-Glu-Asn), corresponding to the C-terminal fragment of the largest subunit of eukaryotic RNA polymerase II; a more lipophilic derivative, ACP-2 (Ala-Ile-Ser-Pro-Asp-Asp-Ser-Asp-Glu-Glu-Asn); and its phosphorylated form ACP-3 (Ala-Ile-Ser-Pro-Asp-Asp-Ser(P)-Asp-Glu-Glu-Asn). Rat hypothalamic synaptosomes, loaded with [(3)H]norepinephrine or [(3)H]dopamine, were perfused with the above peptides, both basally and during a depolarizing stimulus. We have found: ACP-1 inhibited both dopamine and norepinephrine release; ACP-2 inhibited dopamine release, without affecting norepinephrine release; ACP-3 was almost ineffective, except for a weak dopamine inhibiting effect only at a higher concentration.  相似文献   

20.
d-Amphetamine (AMPH) and MDMA increased intracellular production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in isolated mouse striatal synaptosomes. MDMA showed a maximal oxidative effect at 50-100 microM. However, for AMPH a double maximum was obtained, the first between 0.1 and 1 microM and the second at 1mM. No oxidative effect was present in synaptosomes from reserpinized mice. Cocaine and l-deprenyl inhibited MDMA and AMPH (0.1 microM) ROS production but not that of AMPH at a higher concentration (1mM). When this high concentration was used, its oxidative effect was abolished by a phospholipase A(2) inhibitor. Delta(9)-Tetrahydrocannabinol fully prevented the oxidative effect of AMPH and MDMA, by a CB(1) receptor-independent mechanism, as did it NPC 15437 and genistein. The pro-oxidative effect induced by AMPH and MDMA showed a strong dependence on calcium (extracellular and from internal stores) and also was inhibited by nicotinic receptor (nAChR) antagonists dihydro-beta-erythroidine, methyllycaconitine (MLA) and alpha-bungarotoxin. MDMA displaced [(3)H]epibatidine and [(3)H]MLA binding with higher affinity than AMPH. Both amphetamines competitively displaced [(3)H]epibatidine from heteromeric receptors but results obtained from [(3)H]MLA binding demonstrated a non-competitive profile. Preincubation of PC12 cells with AMPH or MDMA reduced [(3)H]dopamine uptake. For MDMA, this effect was prevented by MLA. To summarize, comparing AMPH and MDMA we have demonstrated that these drugs induce an oxidative effect dependent on drug concentration and also reduce dopamine uptake. Processes that are known to affect dopamine transporter functionality also seem to modulate amphetamine derivatives-induced ROS production. For MDMA, acute effects tested are blocked by nAChR antagonists, which points to the possibility that these antagonists could be used to treat some of the adverse effects described in MDMA abusers. Conversely, no implication of nicotinic receptors has been proved for AMPH-induced effects at concentrations achievable in CNS after its administration.  相似文献   

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