Abstract

In rat brain, the regional distribution of the neuroleptic receptor and of dopamine-sensitive adenylate cyclase was found to be very similar, but it differed markedly from the distribution of the opiate receptor. Neuroleptic receptor sites were detectable in the cortex and the hypophysis. After differential centrifugation of rat striatum homogenate, opiate and neuroleptic receptors were enriched in the microsomal fraction while dopamine-sensitive adenylate cyclase revealed a mitochondrial distribution pattern. This different subcellular localization of the neuroleptic receptor and the dopamine-sensitive adenylate cyclase suggests a different function for both receptors.

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