Literature DB >> 18021767

Role of GABAA receptors in the endomorphin-1-, but not endomorphin-2-, induced dopamine efflux in the nucleus accumbens of freely moving rats.

Yuri Aono1, Tadashi Saigusa, Naoko Mizoguchi, Tomoyo Iwakami, Koji Takada, Nobuhito Gionhaku, Yoshiyuki Oi, Koichiro Ueda, Noriaki Koshikawa, Alexander R Cools.   

Abstract

In vivo microdialysis was used to study the effects of the locally applied GABA(A) receptor agonist muscimol and GABA(A) receptor antagonist bicuculline on the basal dopamine efflux as well as on the endomorphin-1- and endomorphin-2-induced dopamine efflux in the nucleus accumbens of freely moving rats. Muscimol (2500 pmol) and bicuculline (5 and 10 nmol) increased basal dopamine efflux. Bicuculline (50 pmol) inhibited the muscimol (2500 pmol)-induced dopamine efflux. Muscimol (250 pmol), but not bicuculline (50 and 500 pmol), enhanced the endomorphin-1 (25 nmol)-induced dopamine efflux. Bicuculline (50 pmol) counteracted the muscimol (250 pmol)-induced increase of the endomorphin-1-elicited dopamine efflux. Neither muscimol (25 and 250 pmol) nor bicuculline (50 and 500 pmol) affected the endomorphin-2 (25 nmol)-induced dopamine efflux. The doses mentioned are the total amount of drug over the infusion period (25 or 50 min) that varied across the drugs. The finding that muscimol and bicuculline increased basal dopamine efflux may imply that these drugs acted at different sites. It is suggested that (1) muscimol acts at GABA(A) receptors on GABA-ergic neurons that exert an inhibitory control of dopaminergic neurons and, accordingly, disinhibits these dopaminergic neurons, and that (2) bicuculline acts directly at GABA(A) receptors on dopaminergic neurons and, accordingly, removes the inhibitory control of these dopaminergic neurons. The finding that an agonist, but not antagonist, of GABA(A) receptors enhanced the endomorphin-1's effects might indicate that endomorphin-1 produced a floor effect at the level of GABA(A) receptors located on presynaptic, dopaminergic terminals. Finally, the present results support our earlier reported notion that endomorphin-1 and endomorphin-2 increase accumbal dopamine efflux by different mechanisms.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 18021767     DOI: 10.1016/j.ejphar.2007.10.020

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Pharmacol        ISSN: 0014-2999            Impact factor:   4.432


  10 in total

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2.  The effects of endomorphins on striatal [3H]GABA release induced by electrical stimulation: an in vitro superfusion study in rats.

Authors:  Zsolt Bagosi; Miklós Jászberényi; Gyula Telegdy
Journal:  Neurochem Res       Date:  2008-10-08       Impact factor: 3.996

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Authors:  S D Schlussman; M Buonora; A J Brownstein; Y Zhang; A Ho; M J Kreek
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Review 5.  Integrative opioid-GABAergic neuronal mechanisms regulating dopamine efflux in the nucleus accumbens of freely moving animals.

Authors:  Tadashi Saigusa; Yuri Aono; John L Waddington
Journal:  Pharmacol Rep       Date:  2021-03-20       Impact factor: 3.024

6.  Subregion-Specific Modulation of Excitatory Input and Dopaminergic Output in the Striatum by Tonically Activated Glycine and GABA(A) Receptors.

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Review 9.  Oxycodone in the Opioid Epidemic: High 'Liking', 'Wanting', and Abuse Liability.

Authors:  Cherkaouia Kibaly; Jacob A Alderete; Steven H Liu; Hazem S Nasef; Ping-Yee Law; Christopher J Evans; Catherine M Cahill
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Review 10.  The Role of Ghrelin/GHS-R1A Signaling in Nonalcohol Drug Addictions.

Authors:  Magdalena Sustkova-Fiserova; Chrysostomos Charalambous; Anna Khryakova; Alina Certilina; Marek Lapka; Romana Šlamberová
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  10 in total

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