Abstract

The activity of nigrostriatal dopaminergic neurons has been estimated biochemically by measuring the rates of dopamine (DA) synthesis (accumulation of dihydroxyphenylalanine (DOPA) after NSD 1015) and turnover (decline of DA concentrations after α-methyltyrosine) in the striatum. It has been assumed that the activities of tuberinfundibular dompaminergic (TIDA) and tuberohypophysial dopaminergic (THDA) neurons can also be estimated by making the same measurements in the terminals of these neurons in the median eminence and the posterior pituitary, respectively. In the present study, this assumption was tested directly by measuring the rates of DA synthesis and turnover in the median eminence and posterior pituitary following electrical stimulation of TIDA and THDA cell bodies in the arcuate nucleus. Electrical stimulation of the arcuate nucleus increased the rate of DOPA accumulation and the α-methyltyrosine-induced decline of DA concentrations in the median eminence and in the neural and intermediate lobes of the posterior pituitary. γ-Butyrolactone (GBL), an anesthetic that selectivelly inhibits DA impusle flow, reduced by the rates of DA synthesis and turnover in the median eminence. GBL also increased prolactin secretion which is tonically inhibited by DA released from TIDA neurons. Serum prolactin levels were significantly decreased by arcuate nucleus stimulation in GBL-anesthetized rats. These results indicate that the rates of DA synthesis and turnover within the median eminence and posterior pituitary reflect the activities of TIDA and THDA neurons, respectively.

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