Harvey J, Lacey M G
Department of Pharmacology, The Medical School, University of Birmingham, Edgbaston, Birmingham B15 2TT, United Kingdom.
J Neurosci. 1997 Jul 15;17(14):5271-80. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.17-14-05271.1997.
The mechanism underlying dopamine D1 receptor-mediated attenuation of glutamatergic synaptic input to nucleus accumbens (NAcc) neurons was investigated in slices of rat forebrain, using whole-cell patch-clamp recording. The depression by dopamine of EPSCs evoked by single-shock cortical stimulation was stimulus-dependent. Synaptic activation of NMDA-type glutamate receptors was critical for this effect, because dopamine-induced EPSC depressions were blocked by the competitive NMDA receptor antagonist D/L-2-amino-5-phosphonopentanoate (AP5). Application of NMDA also depressed the EPSC, and both this effect and the dopamine depressions were blocked by the A1 receptor antagonist 8-cyclopentyl-1,3-dipropylxanthine (DPCPX), implicating adenosine release in the EPSC depression. A1 receptor agonists also depressed EPSCs by a presynaptic action, causing increased paired-pulse facilitation, but this was insensitive to AP5. Activation of D1 receptors enhanced both postsynaptic inward currents evoked by NMDA application and the isolated NMDA receptor-mediated component of synaptic transmission. The biochemical processes underlying the dopamine-induced EPSC depression did not involve either protein kinase A or the production of cAMP and its metabolites, because this effect was resistant to the protein kinase inhibitors H89 and H7 and the cAMP-specific phosphodiesterase inhibitor rolipram. We conclude that activation of postsynaptic D1 receptors enhances the synaptic activation of NMDA receptors in nucleus accumbens neurons, thereby promoting a transsynaptic feedback inhibition of glutamatergic synaptic transmission via release of adenosine. Unusually for D1 receptors, this phenomenon occurs independently of adenylyl cyclase stimulation. This process may contribute to the locomotor stimulant action of dopaminergic agents in the NAcc.
采用全细胞膜片钳记录技术,在大鼠前脑切片中研究了多巴胺D1受体介导的伏隔核(NAcc)神经元谷氨酸能突触输入减弱的机制。多巴胺对单脉冲皮层刺激诱发的兴奋性突触后电流(EPSCs)的抑制作用具有刺激依赖性。NMDA型谷氨酸受体的突触激活对该效应至关重要,因为多巴胺诱导的EPSC抑制被竞争性NMDA受体拮抗剂D/L-2-氨基-5-磷酸戊酸(AP5)阻断。应用NMDA也可抑制EPSC,并且这种效应和多巴胺引起的抑制均被A1受体拮抗剂8-环戊基-1,3-二丙基黄嘌呤(DPCPX)阻断,提示腺苷释放参与了EPSC抑制。A1受体激动剂也通过突触前作用抑制EPSC,导致成对脉冲易化增加,但这对AP5不敏感。D1受体的激活增强了NMDA应用诱发的突触后内向电流以及突触传递中分离出的NMDA受体介导的成分。多巴胺诱导的EPSC抑制的生化过程不涉及蛋白激酶A或cAMP及其代谢产物的产生,因为这种效应不受蛋白激酶抑制剂H89和H7以及cAMP特异性磷酸二酯酶抑制剂咯利普兰的影响。我们得出结论,突触后D1受体的激活增强了伏隔核神经元中NMDA受体的突触激活,从而通过腺苷释放促进谷氨酸能突触传递的反突触反馈抑制。与D1受体不同的是,这种现象独立于腺苷酸环化酶刺激而发生。这一过程可能有助于多巴胺能药物在伏隔核中的运动兴奋作用。