Repeated cocaine administration results in supersensitivity of striatal D-2 dopamine autoreceptors to pergolide
- PMID: 3275855
- DOI: 10.1016/0024-3205(88)90634-0
Repeated cocaine administration results in supersensitivity of striatal D-2 dopamine autoreceptors to pergolide
Abstract
Groups of rats administered cocaine-HC1 (10 mg/kg, i.p.) or saline either acutely or once daily for 8 or 14 days were killed 24 hrs after the last dose. In striatal slices prelabelled with [3H]DA, modulation of [3H]-overflow by pergolide was used to measure D-2 autoreceptor activity. Compared to the contemporaneous control group pergolide produced a greater inhibition only in striatal slices from rats treated repeatedly with cocaine. In radioligand binding studies using striatal membranes from control rats, pergolide had a 500-fold greater affinity for the D-2, as opposed to the D-1, dopamine (DA) receptor subtype. These results indicate that repeated treatment with cocaine produces supersensitive striatal D-2 release-modulating autoreceptors consistent with a compensatory change to diminish the effect of elevated synaptic concentrations of DA produced by cocaine. In contrast, supersensitivity of D-2 receptors was not detected in [3H]spiperone binding assays.
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