Abstract

1. The effects of sibutramine (0.25 - 10 mg kg-1 i.p.) on extracellular noradrenaline concentration in the frontal cortex and hypothalamus of freely-moving rats were investigated using microdialysis. The role of presynaptic alpha2-adrenoceptors in modulating the effects of sibutramine in these brain areas was also determined. 2. Sibutramine induced an increase in extracellular noradrenaline concentration, the magnitude of which paralleled dose, in both brain areas. In the cortex, this increase was gradual and sustained, whereas in the hypothalamus it was more rapid and of shorter duration. 3. In both the cortex and hypothalamus, pretreatment of rats with the alpha2-adrenoceptor antagonist RX821002 (3 mg kg-1 i.p.) potentiated increases in the accumulation of extracellular noradrenaline induced by sibutramine (10 mg kg-1 i. p.), by 7 and 10 fold respectively. RX821002 also reduced the latency of sibutramine to reach its maximum effect in the cortex, but not in the hypothalamus. 4. Infusion of RX821002 (1 microM) via the probe increased the accumulation of extracellular noradrenaline induced by sibutramine (10 mg kg-1 i.p.) in both brain areas. In the hypothalamus, the effects of RX821002 on the accumulation of noradrenaline induced by sibutramine were 2 fold greater than those in the cortex. 5. These findings support evidence that sibutramine inhibits the reuptake of noradrenaline in vivo, but that the accumulation of extracellular noradrenaline is limited by noradrenergic activation of presynaptic alpha2-adrenoceptors. Furthermore, the data suggest that terminal alpha2-adrenoceptors in the hypothalamus exert a greater inhibitory effect over the control of extracellular noradrenaline accumulation than do those in the cortex.

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