Abstract: | The effects of 1·10–5–1·10–3 M dopamine on background and evoked interneuronal-activity was investigated during experiments on a spinal cord segment isolated from 11–18-day old infnat rats. Dopamine induced an increase in background firing activity rate in 52.5% and a reduced rate in 42.5% of the total sample of responding cells. Dopamine exerted a primarily inhibitory effect on interneuronal activity invoked by dorsal root stimulation, as witnessed by the reduced amplitude of the postsynaptic component of field potentials in the dorsal horn together with the fact that invoked activity was depressed in 66.7% of total interneurons responding to dopamine and facilitated in only 33.3% of these cells. All dopamine-induced effects were reversible and dose-dependent. Dopamine-induced effects disappeared after superfusing the brain with a solution containing 0–0.1 mM Ca2+ and 2 mM Mn2+, suggesting that this response is of transsynaptic origin. In other cells the excitatory or inhibitory action of dopamine also persisted in a medium blocking synaptic transmission; this would indicate the possibility of dopamine exerting depolarizing and hyperpolarizing effects on the interneuron membrane directly. Contrasting responses to dopamine in interneurons may be attributed to the presence of different types of dopamine receptors in the spinal cord.A. A. Bogomolets Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSR, Kiev. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 21, No. 1, pp. 7–16, January–February, 1989. |