Effects of aging on the interaction between glutamate, dopamine, and GABA in striatum and nucleus accumbens of the awake rat
- PMID: 10537066
Effects of aging on the interaction between glutamate, dopamine, and GABA in striatum and nucleus accumbens of the awake rat
Abstract
The aim of the present study was to investigate, using microdialysis, the effects of aging on the glutamate/dopamine/GABA interaction in striatum and nucleus accumbens of the awake rat. For that, the effects of an increase of the endogenous concentration of glutamate on the extracellular concentration of dopamine and GABA in striatum and nucleus accumbens of young (2-4 months), middle-aged (12-14 months), aged (27-33 months), and very aged (37 months) male Wistar rats were studied. Endogenous extracellular glutamate was selectively increased by perfusing the glutamate uptake inhibitor L-trans-pyrrolidine-3,4-dicarboxylic acid (PDC) through the microdialysis probe. In young rats, PDC (1, 2, and 4 mM) produced a dose-related increase of dialysate concentrations of glutamate in both striatum and nucleus accumbens. PDC also increased dialysate dopamine and GABA in both structures. These increases were significantly correlated with the increases of glutamate but not with the PDC dose used, which strongly suggests that the increases of dopamine and GABA were produced by glutamate. In striatum, there were no significant differences in the dopamine/glutamate and GABA/glutamate correlations between young and aged rats. This means that the effects of glutamate on dopamine and GABA do not change during aging. On the contrary, in the nucleus accumbens of aged rats, the increases of dopamine, when correlated with the increases of glutamate, were significantly lower than in young rats. Moreover, the ratio of dopamine to glutamate increases at maximal increases of glutamate was negatively correlated with aging. On the contrary, the ratio of GABA to glutamate increases in nucleus accumbens was positively correlated with aging, which suggests that the effects of endogenous glutamate on GABA tend to be higher in the nucleus accumbens of aged rats. The findings of this study suggest that aging changes the interaction between endogenous glutamate, dopamine, and GABA in nucleus accumbens, but not in striatum, of the awake rat.
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