Abstract

In acute experiments on cats and rats, we demonstrated that the relative number of neostriatal neurons responding to stimulation of the motor cortex with latencies below 8.0 msec significantly decreased after functional destruction of the nigro-striatal dopaminergic system caused by injections of reserpine. Despite the fact that the level of dopamine (DA) in the neostriatum returned to the initial value 24 h after injection of the above neuroleptic, cortico-striatal impulsation recovered slowly, and the number of short-latency corticofugal reactions attained a near-control value only in one month. The data obtained confirm our earlier hypothesis on the toxic effect of excessive amounts of glutamate (which is observed under conditions of the DA deficiency) on receptors of this neurotransmitter. We conclude that, under normal conditions, DA exerts an inhibitory/protective effect on transmission of impulsation through direct cortico-striatal connections influencing D2 receptors localized on cortico-striatal glutamatergic efferents.

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