Abstract

In vivo electrochemical techniques were used to study the effects of the sulfated (CCK8-S) and unsulfated (CCK8-US) forms of cholecystokinin octapeptide on apomorphine-induced inhibition of dopamine (DA) release in the nucleus accumbens of the anesthetized rat. A dose-dependent inhibition of DA release was observed with intravenous (i.v.) injections of apomorphine. CCK8-S administered i.v. at the nadir of the apomorphine-induced inhibition of DA release produced a transient and dose-dependent increase followed by a prolonged decrease in DA release. CCK8-US was ineffective in altering apomorphine's inhibitory effects on DA release. The CCK receptor antagonist proglumide injected i.v. 10 min after apomorphine administration had no effect on apomorphine-induced inhibition of DA release, but blocked the effects of CCK8-S on this inhibition. Given that apomorphine may inhibit DA release by a direct hyperpolarizing action on DA neurons, the observation that CCK8-S temporarily reverses apomorphine-induced effects and further inhibits DA release suggests that CCK8-S exerts its inhibitory effects via a process of depolarization block in DA neurons. These findings indicate that apomorphine and CCK8-S may inhibit DA release in vivo by opposite effects on DA cell membrane potentials and suggest that endogenously released CCK may serve to modulate mesolimbic DA neurotransmission.

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