The effects of a κ-opioid receptor agonist on acute amphetamine-induced behavioral activation and dialysate levels of dopamine and glutamate in the ventral striatum were investigated. Amphetamine (2.5 mg/kg i.p.) evoked a substantial increase in rearing, sniffing, and hole-poking behavior as well as dopamine and glutamate levels in the ventral striatum of awake rats. U- 69593 (0.32 mg/kg s.c.) significantly decreased the amphetamine-evoked increase in behavior and dopamine and glutamate levels in the ventral striatum. Reverse dialysis of the selective κ-opioid receptor antagonist, nor-binaltorphimine, into the ventral striatum antagonized the effects of U- 69593 on amphetamine-induced behavior and dopamine and glutamate levels. Reverse dialysis of low calcium (0.1 mM) into the ventral striatum decreased basal dopamine, but not glutamate, dialysate levels by 91% 45 min after initiation of perfusion. Strikingly, 0.1 mM calcium perfusion significantly reduced the 2.5 mg/kg amphetamine-evoked increase in dopamine and glutamate levels in the ventral striatum, distinguishing a calcium-dependent and a calcium-independent component of release. U-69593 did not alter the calcium- independent component of amphetamine-evoked dopamine and glutamate levels. These data are consistent with the view that a transsynaptic mechanism augments the increase in dopamine and glutamate levels in the ventral striatum evoked by a moderately high dose of amphetamine and that stimulation of κ-opioid receptors suppresses the calcium-dependent component of amphetamine's effects.
CITATION STYLE
Gray, A. M., Rawls, S. M., Shippenberg, T. S., & McGinty, J. F. (1999). The κ-opioid agonist, U-69593, decreases acute amphetamine-evoked behaviors and calcium-dependent dialysate levels of dopamine and glutamate in the ventral striatum. Journal of Neurochemistry, 73(3), 1066–1074. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1471-4159.1999.0731066.x
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