Murrin L C, Zeng W Y
Department of Pharmacology, University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha 68105.
Brain Res. 1989 Feb 20;480(1-2):170-7. doi: 10.1016/0006-8993(89)91579-5.
The development of dopamine D1-receptors in rat striatum during the early postnatal period is examined, using autoradiography and [3H]SCH 23390 as ligand. Dopamine D1-receptors are present in striatum at birth and are more dense than in any adjacent region. The receptors are preferentially localized in striosomes and to some extent in a subcallosal streak. The density of D1-receptors in the matrix increases with age so that by two weeks postnatally the striosomal pattern is no longer evident, and the overall dense labelling is the same as seen in adults. Dopamine D1-receptor development seems to take place earlier than that of dopamine terminals but at the same time as or somewhat later than that of acetylcholinesterase. The D1-defined striosomes move from ventrolateral towards dorso-medial striatum with increasing age and from anterior to posterior striatum. This direction is nearly perpendicular to the direction of development of several other markers, including dopamine terminals and D2-receptors. The present studies indicate that for markers appearing in the striosomal compartment there are different patterns of development with respect to time and spatial pattern. Regulation of striatal development by interaction of neuronal systems with one another and with other factors is complex and will require extensive study to clarify the mechanisms involved.