Publication | Closed Access
Dopamine Auto- and Postsynaptic Receptors: Electrophysiological Evidence for Differential Sensitivity to Dopamine Agonists
501
Citations
20
References
1979
Year
NeurotransmitterNeurotransmissionSocial SciencesDopaminergic CellsPostsynaptic ReceptorsCognitive ScienceNeuropharmacologyDopamine AgonistsNervous SystemDopaminePharmacologyDopamine Auto-Dopamine ResearchNeurobiological MechanismNeurophysiologyNeuroanatomyPhysiologyNeuroscienceBiological PsychiatryCentral Nervous SystemMedicineDopamine Cells
The responses of dopamine cells in the substantia nigra to iontophoretically administered dopamine and intravenous apomorphine were compared to the responses of spontaneously active neurons in the caudate nucleus. Dopaminergic cells were six to ten times more sensitive to dopamine and intravenous apomorphine than 86 percent of the caudate cells tested. This differential sensitivity of dopamine auto- and postsynaptic receptors may explain the apparently paradoxical behavioral effects induced by small compared to large doses of some dopamine agonists and may provide a means of developing new types of drugs to antagonize dopaminergic influence in the central nervous system.
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