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J Neurophysiol (February 25, 2009). doi:10.1152/jn.91304.2008
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Submitted on December 9, 2008
Revised on January 27, 2009
Accepted on February 20, 2009

Dopamine inhibits N-type channels in visceral afferents to reduce synaptic transmitter release under normoxic and chronic intermittent hypoxic conditions

David D. Kline1*, Gabriel Hendricks2, Gerlinda E. Hermann3, Richard C. Rogers3, and Diana L. Kunze4

1 Univ Missouri-Columbia
2 MetroHealth Medical System
3 Pennington Biomedical Research Center
4 MetroHealth Medical Center

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: klinedd{at}missouri.edu.

Glutamatergic synaptic currents elicited in second-order neurons in the nucleus of the solitary tract (nTS) by activation of chemosensory and other visceral afferent fibers are severely reduced following 10 days of chronic intermittent hypoxia (CIH). The mechanism by which this occurs is unknown. A strong candidate for producing the inhibition is dopamine which is also released from the presynaptic terminals and which we have shown exerts a tonic presynaptic inhibition on glutamate release (Kline et al. 2002). We postulated that 1) tonic activation of the D2 receptors inhibits presynaptic calcium currents to reduce transmitter release and that 2) in CIH this occurs in conjunction with an increase in the dopamine inhibitory response due to the increase in presynaptic D2 receptors or an increase in dopamine release further suppressing the eEPSC. Thus, we predicted that blockade of the D2 receptors would return the EPSC to values of animals maintained under normoxic conditions. We found that dopamine and quinpirole, the selective D2-like agonist, inhibit calcium currents via the D2 receptors by acting on the N-type calcium channel in presynaptic neurons and their nTS central terminals. However, in brain slice studies from CIH animals, although the D2 antagonist sulpiride increased the CIH-reduced amplitude of synaptic currents, EPSCs were not restored to normal levels. This indicates that while the dopamine inhibitory effect remains intact in CIH, most of the reduction in the eEPSC amplitude occurs via alternative mechanisms.







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