Abstract
The potential interaction between kappa-opiate receptors and dopamine activity was examined in this study by monitoring the effect of U-50,488H on the release of endogenous dopamine from rat striatal slices in both the absence and presence of 10 microM nomifensine, a potent dopamine uptake inhibitor. Basal dopamine release was increased 10-fold in the presence of nomifensine, and the normally steady base line was observed to increase gradually under these conditions. U-50,488H, a potent kappa-agonist, enhanced the spontaneous release of dopamine, but only at relatively high concentrations (40.0 microM) and only in the absence of nomifensine. Likewise, nomifensine and U-50,488H (40.0 microM) each significantly inhibited the synaptosomal uptake of [3H]dopamine. As with basal release, nomifensine markedly enhanced the potassium-evoked release of dopamine, and this evoked release was significantly attenuated by U-50,488H (0.4 and 40.0 microM) in both the absence and presence of nomifensine. This opiate-mediated inhibition of evoked dopamine release was antagonized in a time-dependent manner by the putative kappa-antagonist, WIN 44,441-3, suggesting that striatal kappa-receptor activation modulates dopamine release.
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