Abstract

Noradrenaline (NA), but not clonidine applied microiontophoretically, inhibited the firing of neurons in the rat A1 noradrenergic region, whereas intravenous clonidine dose-dependently inhibited their firing (ED50 = 18.3 micrograms/kg). The NA-induced inhibition was blocked by the beta-antagonist timolol, but not by the alpha-antagonists phentolamine or piperoxane. These results suggest that neurons in the A1 region possess beta-adrenoceptors rather than alpha-adrenoceptors near their cell bodies, and that systemically administered clonidine acts indirectly on these cells.

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