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. 1986 Jan 1;6(1):120–126. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.06-01-00120.1986

Endogenous dopamine can modulate inhibition of substantia nigra pars reticulata neurons elicited by GABA iontophoresis or striatal stimulation

BL Waszczak, JR Walters
PMCID: PMC6568612  PMID: 3944613

Abstract

Previous reports from this laboratory have described an ability of iontophoretically applied dopamine to attenuate the inhibitory effects of iontophoresed GABA on neurons of the substantia nigra pars reticulata. This finding raised the question of whether endogenous dopamine, released from dendrites of neighboring pars compacta dopamine neurons, might act as a neuromodulator which diminishes the inhibition of pars reticulata neurons evoked by either GABA iontophoresis or electrical stimulation of the striatonigral GABAergic pathway. Extracellular, single-unit activity of pars reticulata neurons was recorded in male rats anesthetized with chloral hydrate. In one set of studies, d-amphetamine, a drug reported to release dopamine from nigral dendrites, was administered intravenously (1.6 mg/kg) during regular, intermittent iontophoretic pulses of GABA. As had been previously observed with iontophoresed dopamine, i.v. amphetamine significantly lessened the inhibition of reticulata neurons produced by GABA application. This change was reflected by a decrease in GABA's inhibitory potency by 22% relative to the control level of inhibition achieved prior to amphetamine administration. Amphetamine caused no decreases in GABA's effectiveness, however, in animals that had previously received treatments that depleted or destroyed nigral dopamine stores, i.e., in rats pretreated with reserpine and alpha- methyl-p-tyrosine, or in rats with 6-hydroxydopamine lesions of the nigrostriatal dopamine pathway. In a second set of experiments, amphetamine or dopamine was delivered iontophoretically while monitoring the GABA-mediated (bicuculline-reversible) inhibition of reticulata neurons that can be elicited by striatal stimulation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


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