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Title: Regulation of dopamine levels in intrastriatal grafts of fetal mesencephalic cell suspension: an in vivo voltammetric approach. Author: Moukhles H, Forni C, Nieoullon A, Daszuta A. Journal: Exp Brain Res; 1994; 102(1):10-20. PubMed ID: 7895786. Abstract: An in vivo voltammetric technique was used to monitor dopamine (DA) release in the 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA)-lesioned rat striatum reinnervated by grafts of ventral mesencephalon containing DA neurons. Extracellular levels of DA were measured during the administration of D1 or D2 DA receptor antagonists. In addition, changes in DA levels induced by agonists and antagonists of excitatory amino acid (EAA) receptors were studied to verify the possible existence of a host glutamatergic control on the grafted DA cells in the 'transplanted' rats. Two months after the grafts were performed, the voltammetric signal measured under baseline conditions in the grafted striata was found to be almost similar to that recorded on the contralateral control side. Likewise, in another group of transplanted rats, the turnover of the amine, as expressed by the DO-PAC/DA tissue level ratio, was found to have become "normalized" after grafting, compared with the lesion-only group. The increase in the voltammetric signal observed after administering the D2 antagonist sulpiride (100 mg/kg i.p.) was lower in the grafted striata than on the contralateral side, however. This suggests that some D2 autoreceptor subsensitivity may have helped to maintain the baseline level of dopaminergic transmission. Adaptive processes of this kind might compensate for the partial DA reinnervation of the host striatum found to occur on the basis of the tyrosine hydroxylase immunostaining patterns. After administration of either the D1 antagonist SCH 23390 (0.1 mg/kg s.c.), or injection of EAA receptor agonists--1-glutamate, quisqualate and N-methyl-D-aspartate (all 10 nmol i.c.v.)--and antagonists--amino-phosphono-valeric acid (10 nmol i.c.v.) and dizocilpine (MK801, 0.2 mg/kg i.p.)--no significant differences between the two striata were detected in the voltammetric signals. These results suggest that, in the grafted rats, neurons belonging to the host population, such as the striatal cells bearing D1 receptors or the corticostriatal afferents presumed to contain glutamate, might modulate the DA levels, as was found to occur under normal conditions.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]