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. 1984 Mar 19;34(12):1161-70.
doi: 10.1016/0024-3205(84)90088-2.

A10 dopamine neurons: role of autoreceptors in determining firing rate and sensitivity to dopamine agonists

A10 dopamine neurons: role of autoreceptors in determining firing rate and sensitivity to dopamine agonists

F J White et al. Life Sci. .

Abstract

The present experiments investigated the relationship between the spontaneous basal firing rate of A10 dopamine (DA) neurons and their sensitivity to the rate-suppressant effects of intravenously administered apomorphine (APO) and d-amphetamine (AMP) as well as microiontophoretically ejected DA. The results indicated highly significant inverse relationships between basal neuronal activity and sensitivity to DA and DA agonists, i.e. the faster the spontaneous rate of an A10 DA neuron, the less sensitive that cell was to agonist-induced suppression. This relationship was not found for the rate suppressant effects of iontophoretic gamma-aminobutyric acid. There were no significant differences between the effects of iontophoretic DA on pre-glutamate and glutamate-driven activity of the same A10 DA neurons indicating that faster firing rates, per se, did not determine the sensitivity of these cells to DA agonists. Rather, these results suggest that both spontaneous activity and sensitivity to DA agonists may be determined by the density (or sensitivity) of DA autoreceptors on A10 DA neurons. This hypothesis was supported by the finding that antidromically identified mesocortical DA neurons, which were significantly less responsive to DA, APO and AMP exhibited significantly faster firing rates than other A10 DA neurons. Thus, this subpopulation of A10 DA neurons is primarily made up of cells with low autoreceptor density (or sensitivity).

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