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1.
The orexigenic peptide ghrelin plays a prominent role in the regulation of energy balance and in the mediation of reward mechanisms and reinforcement for addictive drugs, such as nicotine. Nicotine is the principal psychoactive component in tobacco, which is responsible for addiction and relapse of smokers. Nicotine activates the mesencephalic dopaminergic neurons via nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAchR). Ghrelin stimulates the dopaminergic neurons via growth hormone secretagogue receptors (GHS-R1A) in the ventral tegmental area and the substantia nigra pars compacta resulting in the release of dopamine in the ventral and dorsal striatum, respectively. In the present study an in vitro superfusion of rat striatal slices was performed, in order to investigate the direct action of ghrelin on the striatal dopamine release and the interaction of ghrelin with nicotine through this neurotransmitter release. Ghrelin increased significantly the dopamine release from the rat striatum following electrical stimulation. This stimulatory effect was reversed by both the selective nAchR antagonist mecamylamine and the selective GHS-R1A antagonist GHRP-6. Nicotine also increased significantly the dopamine release under the same conditions. This stimulatory effect was antagonized by mecamylamine, but not by GHRP-6. Ghrelin further stimulated the nicotine-induced dopamine release and this effect was abolished by mecamylamine and was partially inhibited by GHRP-6. The present results demonstrate that ghrelin stimulates directly the dopamine release and amplifies the nicotine-induced dopamine release in the rat striatum. We presume that striatal cholinergic interneurons also express GHS-R1A, through which ghrelin can amplify the nicotine-induced dopamine release in the striatum. This study provides further evidence of the impact of ghrelin on the mesolimbic and nigrostriatal dopaminergic pathways. It also suggests that ghrelin signaling may serve as a novel pharmacological target for treatment of addictive and neurodegenerative disorders.  相似文献   

2.
Nicotine or cocaine, when administered intravenously, induces an increase of extracellular dopamine in the nucleus accumbens. The nicotine-mediated increase was shown to occur at least in part through increase of the activity of dopamine neurons in the ventral tegmental area. As part of our continuing studies of the mechanisms of nicotine effects in the brain, in particular, effects on reward and cognitive mechanisms, in the present study we examined the role of various receptors in the ventral tegmental area in nicotine and cocaine reward. We assayed inhibition of the increase of dopamine in the nucleus accumbens induced by intravenous nicotine or cocaine administration by antagonists administered into the ventral tegmental area. Nicotine-induced increase of accumbal dopamine release was inhibited by intrategmental nicotinic (mecamylamine), muscarinic (atropine), dopaminergic (D1: SCH 23390, D2: eticlopride), and NMDA glutamatergic (MK 801) and GABAB (saclofen) antagonists, but not by AMPA-kainate (CNQX, GYKI-52466) antagonists under our experimental circumstances. The intravenous cocaine-induced increase of dopamine in the nucleus accumbens was inhibited by muscarinic (atropine), dopamine 2 (eticlopride), and GABAB (saclofen) antagonists but not by antagonists to nicotinic (mecamylamine), dopamine D1 (SCH 23390), glutamate (MK 801), or AMPA-kainate (CNQX, GYKI-52466) receptors. Antagonists administered in the ventral tegmental area in the present study had somewhat different effects when they were previously administered intravenously. When administered intravenously atropine did not inhibit cocaine effects. The inhibition by atropine may be indirect, since this compound, when administered intrategmentally, decreased basal dopamine levels in the accumbens. The findings indicate that a number of receptors in the ventral tegmental area mediate nicotine-induced dopamine changes in the nucleus accumbens, a major component of the nicotine reward mechanism. Some, but not all, of these receptors in the ventral tegmental area also seem to participate in the reward mechanism of cocaine. The importance of local receptors in the ventral tegmental area was further indicated by the increase in accumbal dopamine levels after intrategmental administration of nicotine or also cocaine.  相似文献   

3.
Cotinine is the major metabolite of nicotine. Nicotine is rapidly metabolized and has a short half-life, but cotinine is metabolized and eliminated at a much lower rate. Because of the resulting increase with time in the cotinine to nicotine ratio in the body, including in the brain, it is of interest to examine the effect of cotinine on nicotine-induced changes. In studies on conscious, freely-moving rats, intravenous administration of either nicotine or cocaine induced the release of dopamine in the nucleus accumbens, as assayed by microdialysis. Prior intravenous administration of a high dose of cotinine (500 microg/kg) inhibited this nicotine- or cocaine-induced dopamine release. The action of cotinine does not seem to occur through its effect on the metabolism of nicotine or on its binding at the receptor site, because cotinine, unlike nicotine, does not affect the binding of the nicotinic ligand cytisine. The findings suggest that cotinine affects a putative component of the reward mechanism, and as such could have therapeutic value.  相似文献   

4.
Abstract: The rat ventral tegmentum (containing dendrites and somata of mesolimbic neurones) contained 1.3 μg/g of dopamine, which was reduced to 40% of the control level by reserpine. Slices of ventral tegmentum were able to accumulate and release (elevated potassium or protoveratrine A) exogenous [3H]dopamine. In parallel studies the uptake mechanism in ventral tegmentum was shown to be virtually identical to the nerve terminal uptake of [3H]dopamine by slices of nucleus accumbens. The release of [3H]dopamine was indistinguishable from that observed in substantia nigra, where there is substantial evidence for dendritic mechanisms. Basal adenylate cyclase activity was present, but dopamine-stimulated activity was not detected. A high GABA concentration (7.7 μmol/g) was present in ventral tegmentum, in conjunction with an uptake and a release mechanism for [3H]GABA. GABA and muscimol elicited a small, reproducible efflux of [3H]dopamine, but an interaction between dopamine and [3H]GABA efflux was not observed. The results are in accord with transmitter roles for dopamine and GABA in the somatoden-dritic area of mesolimbic dopaminergic neurons.  相似文献   

5.
Nicotine acts in CNS, but the pathways and mechanisms of its actions are poorly understood. Recent studies suggest an interaction between brain nicotinic receptors and endogenous opioid peptides. Acute administration of nicotine may alter enkephalin release without affecting brain enkephalin level. Tyr-Gly-Gly has been shown previously to be an extraneuronal metabolite of opioid peptides derived from proenkephalin A. Concentrations of Tyr-Gly-Gly in brain were used to provide an index of enkephalin release in vivo. Thus we examined the thesis that nicotine alters brain neuronal enkephalin release, by measuring Tyr-Gly-Gly levels in specific brain nuclei from rats treated with nicotine 0.3 mg/kg SC 10 min before decapitation. Of 30 brain regions investigated, acute nicotine increased Tyr-Gly-Gly immunoreactivity in nucleus accumbens and in lower brain stem areas including dorsal raphe, pontine reticular formation, gigantocellular reticular formation, locus coeruleus, sensory trigeminal nucleus and the caudal part of ventrolateral medulla oblongata. Concomitantly, nicotine produced a significant decrease in native Met-enkephalin in central amygdala, flocculo-nodular lobe of cerebellum, caudal part of the ventrolateral medulla and intermediolateral cell column of the spinal cord. It is probable that the effects of nicotine to increase Tyr-Gly-Gly and alter Met-enkephalin concentration are mediated by nicotine-induced release of enkephalin at these brain sites. Furthermore, some of the physiologic and pharmacologic effects of nicotine may be mediated by such enkephalin release.  相似文献   

6.
Abstract: The modulation of dopamine release by presynaptic nicotinic receptors in vitro is well established, but the significance of this effect in vivo is unclear. We have characterised the effect of nicotine, locally applied via a microdialysis probe, on dopamine release from the terminal regions of three ascending dopaminergic pathways in conscious, freely moving rats. Nicotine caused a dose-dependent increase in dopamine release in the striatum, the nucleus accumbens, and, to a lesser extent, the frontal cortex. Metabolite levels were unaltered by any concentration of nicotine. Prior administration of mecamylamine via the probe abolished the nicotine-evoked increase in dopamine release, confirming the mediation of nicotinic receptors. The dose dependence of mecamylamine-sensitive, nicotine-evoked dopamine release was similar in all three brain regions. However, 10−5 M tetrodotoxin totally blocked nicotine-stimulated dopamine release in the striatum and the accumbens but not the cortex. Daily subcutaneous injections of nicotine (0.4 mg kg−1 for 7 days) increased the response to a subsequent local application of nicotine in the striatum, and a similar trend was found in the other brain areas. The same daily dose of nicotine given as a continuous infusion had no effect, whereas infusion of 4 mg kg−1 day−1 increased the response to a subsequent nicotine challenge. The localisation and regulation of nicotinic receptors in the terminal fields of dopaminergic pathways are discussed.  相似文献   

7.
In a continuing study of nicotine-induced mechanisms in brain areas associated with cognitive processes, the effects of cholinergic and dopaminergic antagonists on nicotine-induced changes in dopamine, norepinephrine, and serotonin were examined. These effects were measured via in vivo microdialysis in the dorsal and ventral hippocampus and in the prefrontal and medial temporal cortex of conscious, freely moving, adult male rats. Nicotine (0.3 mg/kg, free base) was administered subcutaneously and the antagonists were infused locally via the microdialysis probe. Nicotine alone induced an increase of dopamine and its metabolites in all areas, an increase of norepinephrine in the cortex, and an increase of the norepinephrine metabolite 4–hydroxy-3-methoxy-phenylglycol in all areas. Serotonin was decreased in the hippocampus and increased in the cortex. Nicotine-induced dopamine increases were inhibited by nicotinic (mecamylamine 100 μM, methyllycaconitine 500 μM), muscarinic (atropine 100 μM), and dopaminergic D1 (SCH23390 100 μM) and D2 (eticlopride 100 μM) antagonists, in the hippocampal and cortical areas. In the hippocampal areas, these antagonists had less significant effect on norepinephrine and serotonin. However, in the cortical areas, all antagonists inhibited the nicotine-induced increase of serotonin to varying degrees; and some, primarily nicotinic and dopamine D1 antagonists, inhibited the induced increase of norepinephrine. In the hippocampal and cortical areas, the mechanisms of nicotine-induced dopamine increase seem to be similar, but the mechanisms seem to be different for noradrenergic and serotonergic systems, as shown by the fact that nicotine induces no change in norepinephrine and a decrease in serotonin in the hippocampus, while it induces an increase in both in the cortex. Nicotine-induced dopamine release seems to be mediated, in part locally, by nicotinic and muscarinic receptors on dopaminergic cells. In contrast, nicotine’s effect on norepinephrine and serotonin is at least partially mediated by initial changes at other than local sites, and through different receptors. Thus, the effects of nicotine and the mechanisms involved differ for different neurotransmitters and in different brain areas.  相似文献   

8.
Abstract— In this study we demonstrate that a 51-kDa phosphoprotein, previously identified as morphine regulated and showing different basal levels among rat strains, is glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP). Chronic morphine increased levels of GFAP immunoreactivity by >70% in the ventral tegmental area (VTA) of outbred Sprague-Dawley rats. This increase in GFAP content was not observed in rats that were treated concomitantly with morphine and naltrexone, an opiate receptor antagonist, and did not occur in response to a single acute injection with morphine. No alterations in GFAP levels were observed in response to chronic morphine in several other regions of the CNS studied, including the substantia nigra, locus coeruleus, cerebral cortex, and spinal cord. There were also inherent differences in levels of GFAP immunoreactivity in the VTA of drug-naive Fischer 344 and Lewis rats, two inbred rat strains that differ in their relative preference for morphine and other drugs of abuse. The VTA of drug-naive Lewis rats contained more than twofold higher levels of GFAP compared with drug-naive Fischer rats. This strain difference was also apparent in the locus coeruleus but not in several other brain regions or in spinal cord. Because the mesolimbic dopamine system is thought to play a critical role in mediating the reinforcing properties of opiates and other drugs of abuse, it is possible that the opiate induction of GFAP and inherent Lewis versus Fischer strain differences in GFAP levels in the VTA may be related to the reinforcing and/or addictive properties of opiates mediated by this brain region, as well as to genetic differences in drug preference.  相似文献   

9.
Abstract: Nicotine has been shown to stimulate neurotransmitter release from brain tissue by acting on presynaptic receptors. In this study, the ability of nicotine pretreatment to produce functional desensitization was investigated in rat striatal synaptosomes in which the release of [3H]dopamine was measured with an in vitro superfusion system. Pretreatment of synaptosomes with low concentrations of l -nicotine resulted in a decrease in the ability of a subsequent nicotine challenge to evoke [3H]dopamine release. The IC50 for nicotine-induced desensitization was found to be 12 n M with a maximum inhibition of >90% at 300 n M . Nicotine pretreatment did not affect the release evoked by amphetamine, veratridine, or 15 m M K+. The onset of nicotine-induced desensitization occurred with a t 1/2 of 43 s at 30 n M nicotine. The temperature dependence of onset yielded a Q10 of 1.2.Recovery from desensitization was slower ( t 1/2 = 4.33 min), and both the onset and recovery appeared to follow a single first-order process. Several intermittent schedules of nicotine treatment were found to be effective at inducing and maintaining desensitization. The results of this study show that nonstimulating concentrations of nicotine can produce a complete functional desensitization of subsequent nicotine-induced neurotransmitter release.  相似文献   

10.
(–)Nicotine acetylcholine receptors are located on both nerve cell bodies and synaptic terminals, are permeable to calcium, and function perhaps predominantly by facilitating the release of neurotransmitters and neuropeptides. The behavioral rewards from (–)nicotine and perhaps addiction appear to be related to dopamine release. 31P NMR analysis reveals subcutaneously administered (–)nicotine produces acute alterations in brain membrane phospholipid and high-energy phosphate metabolism of Fischer 344 rats. These metabolic responses to (–)nicotine could contribute to nicotine's behavioral effects.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Abstract: The mesolimbic system of the brain has been shown to be involved in the reward properties of a number of agents. It is possible that release of monoamines by nicotine in this brain area could be related to the pleasurable aspects related to cigarette smoking. In this investigation, the effect of nicotine on the release of [3H]dopamine in the nucleus accumbens of the rat was studied. It was shown that nicotine produced a concentration-dependent increase in [3H]dopamine release at concentrations of 0.1 μ M and above. The increase in release was found to be almost completely calcium dependent. The nicotine-induced release was only partially blocked by the nicotinic antagonists hexamethonium and d -tubocurarine. A number of cholinergic agonists, as well as other compounds, were tested for their capacity to mimic the effect of nicotine. At equimolar concentrations there was, at most, only 50% of the activity of nicotine. The results of this study demonstrate that nicotine stimulates the release of dopamine in the nucleus accumbens at concentrations similar to those in the blood of cigarette smokers. This suggests that the release of mono-amines in specific nuclei of the mesolimbic system may be an important determinant of the desire to smoke cigarettes.  相似文献   

13.
In our recent studies on nicotine-induced changes in neurotransmitters in brain areas associated with cognitive function using a nicotine dose of 0.5 mg/kg administered subcutaneously to conscious freely moving rats, we found changes in dopamine, norepinephrine, and serotonin, and their metabolites, in the areas examined. For the present report we examined changes in these neurotransmitters following administration of lower nicotine doses, to test regional differences in nicotine response and possible threshold levels for some effects of nicotine. The doses used were 0.15 mg/kg and 0.03 mg/kg nicotine administered subcutaneously. Nicotine levels in the brain reached peak values in less than 10 min and decreased with a half-life of about 60 min (0.15 mg/kg) or 30 min (0.03 mg/kg) to values below detection limits (1 ng/g), by the later time points of the 0.03 mg/kg experiments. Nicotine-induced dopamine (DA) increase (and increase in DA metabolites) and decrease in 5-HT levels at 0.15 mg/kg were significant in the cortex, less so in the hippocampus. Norepinephrine (NE) increase at 0.15 mg/kg was much less significant than found previously at 0.5 mg/kg. At a low nicotine dose (0.03 mg/kg), the significant changes observed were a decrease in 5-HT in the hippocampus and small increases of DA and NE in the prefrontal cortex and of NE in the medial temporal cortex. In the nucleus accumbens DA, NE, and 5-HT and their metabolites in the ventral tegmental area, mostly DA and metabolites were increased. We conclude that in areas of cognitive function nicotine-induced DA changes are more concentration dependent than changes in NE or 5-HT, and that there are regional differences in neurotransmitter changes induced by nicotine, with NE changes detectable only in the cortex and 5-HT changes only in the hippocampus at a low nicotine dose, indicating significant regional variation in sensitivity to nicotine-induced neurotransmitter changes in brain areas associated with cognitive function. The decrease in 5-HT shows that nicotine also has indirect effects caused by neurotransmitters released by nicotine. The effects of low nicotine dose are more significant in areas of reward function, indicating differences in sensitivity between cognitive and reward functions.  相似文献   

14.
Nicotine is a highly addictive drug and exerts this effect partially through the modulation of dopamine release and increasing extracellular dopamine in regions such as the brain reward systems. Nicotine acts in these regions on nicotinic acetylcholine receptors. The effect of nicotine on the frequency dependent modulation of dopamine release is well established and the purpose of this study was to investigate whether dopamine D1 receptor (D1R) ligands have an influence on this. Using fast cyclic voltammetry and rat corticostriatal slices, we show that D1R ligands are able to modulate the effect of nicotine on dopamine release. Nicotine (500 nM) induced a decrease in dopamine efflux at low frequency (single pulse or five pulses at 10 Hz) and an increase at high frequency (100 Hz) electrical field stimulation. The D1R agonist SKF-38393, whilst having no effect on dopamine release on its own or on the effect of nicotine upon multiple pulse evoked dopamine release, did significantly prevent and reverse the effect of nicotine on single pulse dopamine release. Interestingly similar results were obtained with the D1R antagonist SCH-23390. In this study we have demonstrated that the modulation of dopamine release by nicotine can be altered by D1R ligands, but only when evoked by single pulse stimulation, and are likely working via cholinergic interneuron driven dopamine release.  相似文献   

15.
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 D2 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 D2 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 that (+)-amphetamine modifies electrically stimulated dopamine release by uptake inhibition or by indirect activation of D2 autoreceptors; the precise mechanism is determined by site and duration of electrical stimulation.  相似文献   

16.
Cannabinoid receptors are widely distributed in the nuclei of the extrapyramidal motor and mesolimbic reward systems; their exact functions are, however, not known. The aim of the present study was to characterize the effects of cannabinoids on the electrically evoked release of endogenous dopamine in the corpus striatum and the nucleus accumbens. In rat brain slices dopamine release elicited by single electrical pulses was determined by fast cyclic voltammetry. Dopamine release was markedly inhibited by the OP2 opioid receptor agonist U-50488 and the D2/D3 dopamine receptor agonist quinpirole, indicating that our method is suitable for studying presynaptic modulation of dopamine release. In contrast, the CB1/CB2 cannabinoid receptor agonists WIN55212-2 (10(-6) M) and CP55940 (10(-6)-10(-5) M) and the CB1 cannabinoid receptor antagonist SR141716A (10(-6) M) had no effect on the electrically evoked dopamine release in the corpus striatum and the nucleus accumbens. The lack of a presynaptic effect on terminals of nigrostriatal and mesolimbic dopaminergic neurons is in accord with the anatomical distribution of cannabinoid receptors: The perikarya of these neurons in the substantia nigra and the ventral tegmental area do not synthesize mRNA, and hence protein, for CB1 and CB2 cannabinoid receptors. It is therefore unlikely that presynaptic modulation of dopamine release in the corpus striatum and the nucleus accumbens plays a role in the extrapyramidal motor and rewarding effects of cannabinoids.  相似文献   

17.
Long‐term nicotine exposure induces alterations in dopamine transmission in nucleus accumbens that sustain the reinforcing effects of smoking. One approach to understand the adaptive changes that arise involves measurement of endogenous dopamine release using voltammetry. We therefore treated rats for 2–3 months with nicotine and examined alterations in nAChR subtype expression and electrically evoked dopamine release in rat nucleus accumbens shell, a region key in addiction. Long‐term nicotine treatment selectively decreased stimulated α6β2* nAChR‐mediated dopamine release compared with vehicle‐treated rats. It also reduced α6β2* nAChRs, suggesting the receptor decline may contribute to the functional loss. This decreased response in release after chronic nicotine treatment was still partially sensitive to the agonist nicotine. Studies with an acetylcholinesterase inhibitor demonstrated that the response was also sensitive to increased endogenous acetylcholine. However, unlike the agonists, nAChR antagonists decreased dopamine release only in vehicle‐ but not nicotine‐treated rats. As antagonists function by blocking the action of acetylcholine, their ineffectiveness suggests that reduced acetylcholine levels partly underlie the dampened α6β2* nAChR‐mediated function in nicotine‐treated rats. As long‐term nicotine modifies dopamine release by decreasing α6β2* nAChRs and their function, these data suggest that interventions that target this subtype may be useful for treating nicotine dependence.

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18.
The present study used voltammetry to ascertain whether electrically stimulated somatodendritic dopamine release in ventral tegmental area slices from C57BL/6 and dopamine transporter knockout mice was due to exocytosis or dopamine transporter reversal, as has been debated. The maximal concentration of electrically evoked dopamine release was similar between ventral tegmental area slices from dopamine transporter knockout and C57BL/6 mice. Dopamine transporter blockade (10 μM nomifensine) in slices from C57BL/6 mice inhibited dopamine uptake but did not alter peak evoked dopamine release. In addition, dopamine release and uptake kinetics in ventral tegmental area slices from dopamine transporter knockout mice were unaltered by the norepinephrine transporter inhibitor, desipramine (10 μM), or the serotonin transporter inhibitor, fluoxetine (10 μM). Furthermore, maximal dopamine release in ventral tegmental area slices from both C57BL/6 and dopamine transporter knockout mice was significantly decreased in response to Na+ channel blockade by 1 μM tetrototoxin, removal of Ca2+ from the perfusion media and neuronal vesicular monoamine transporter inhibition by RO-04-1284 (10 μM) or tetrabenazine (10 and 100 μM). Finally, the glutamate receptor antagonists AP-5 (50 and 100 μM) and CNQX (20 and 50 μM) had no effect on peak somatodendritic dopamine release in C57BL/6 mice. Overall, these data suggest that similar mechanisms, consistent with exocytosis, govern electrically evoked dopamine release in ventral tegmental area slices from C57BL/6 and dopamine transporter knockout mice.  相似文献   

19.
The orexigenic peptide ghrelin plays a prominent role in the regulation of energy balance and in the mediation of reward processes and reinforcement for addictive drugs, such as nicotine. Nicotine is the principal psychoactive component in tobacco, which is responsible for addiction and relapse of smokers. Ghrelin and nicotine activates the mesolimbicocortical dopaminergic pathways via growth hormone secretagogue receptors (GHS-R1A) and nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAchR), respectively, resulting in the release of dopamine in the nucleus accumbens, the amygdala and the prefrontal cortex. In the present study an in vitro superfusion of rat amygdalar slices was performed in order to investigate the direct action of ghrelin and nicotine on the amygdalar dopamine release. Ghrelin increased significantly the dopamine release from the rat amygdala following electrical stimulation. This effect was inhibited by both the selective GHS-R1A antagonist GHRP-6 and the selective nAchR antagonist mecamylamine. Under the same conditions, nicotine also increased significantly the dopamine release from the rat amygdala. This effect was antagonized by mecamylamine, but not by GHRP-6. Co-administration of ghrelin and nicotine induced a similar increase of amygdalar dopamine release. This stimulatory effect was partially reversed by both GHRP-6 and mecamylamine. The present results demonstrate that both ghrelin and nicotine stimulates directly the dopamine release in the amygdala, an important dopaminergic target area of the mesolimbicocortical pathway.  相似文献   

20.
Abstract: The objective of these experiments was to determine whether the chronic administration of nicotine, at a dose regimen that increases the density of nicotine binding sites, alters the nicotine-induced release of [3H]dopamine ([3H]DA), [3H]norepinephrine ([3H]NE), [3H]serotonin ([3H]5-HT), or [3H]acetylcholine ([3H]ACh) from rat striatal slices. For these experiments, rats received subcutaneous injections of either saline or nicotine bitartrate [1.76 mg (3.6 µmol)/kg, dissolved in saline] twice daily for 10 days, and neurotransmitter release was measured following preloading of the tissues with [3H]DA, [3H]NE, [3H]5-HT, or [3H]choline. Chronic nicotine administration did not affect the accumulation of tritium by striatal slices, the basal release of radioactivity, or the 25 mM KCl-evoked release of neurotransmitter. Superfusion of striatal slices with 1, 10, and 100 µM nicotine increased [3H]DA release in a concentration-dependent manner, and release from slices from nicotine-injected animals was significantly (p < 0.05) greater than release from saline-injected controls; release from the former increased to 132, 191, and 172% of release from the controls following superfusion with 1, 10, and 100 µM nicotine, respectively. Similarly, [3H]5-HT release increased in a concentration-related manner following superfusion with nicotine, and release from slices from nicotine-injected rats was significantly (p < 0.05) greater than that from controls. [3H]5-HT release from slices from nicotine-injected rats evoked by superfusion with 1 and 10 µM nicotine increased to 453 and 217%, respectively, of release from slices from saline-injected animals. The nicotine-induced release of [3H]NE from striatal slices was also concentration dependent but was unaffected by chronic nicotine administration. [3H]ACh release from striatal slices could not be detected when samples were superfused with nicotine but was measurable when tissues were incubated with nicotine. The release of [3H]ACh from slices from nicotine-injected rats was significantly (p < 0.05) less than release from controls and decreased to 36, 83, and 77% of control values following incubation with 1, 10, or 100 µM nicotine, respectively. This decreased [3H]ACh release could not be attributed to methodological differences because slices from nicotine-injected rats incubated with nicotine exhibited an increased [3H]DA release, similar to results from superfusion studies. In addition, it is unlikely that the decreased release of [3H]ACh from striatal slices from nicotine-injected rats was secondary to increased DA release because [3H]ACh release from slices from hippocampus, which is not tonically inhibited by DA, also decreased significantly (p < 0.05) in response to nicotine; hippocampal slices from nicotine-injected rats incubated with 1 and 10 µM nicotine decreased to 42 and 70%, respectively, of release from slices from saline-injected animals. Results indicate that the chronic administration of nicotine increases the ability of nicotine to induce the release of [3H]DA and [3H]5-HT and decreases the ability of nicotine to evoke the release of [3H]ACh but does not alter the nicotine-induced release of [3H]NE from brain slices.  相似文献   

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