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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-2072
    Keywords: Cocaine ; Dopamine ; Continuous administration ; Caudate nucleus ; Autoreceptors ; Voltammetry
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Chronic daily injections of cocaine induce behavioral sensitization to subsequent cocaine challenge, while continuous infusion induces tolerance. Following a 7-day withdrawal period, we examined the effects of these two dosing regimens on: (1) baseline dopamine efflux and uptake following single-pulse electrical stimulation, (2) inhibition of uptake by cocaine; and (3) inhibition of efflux by autoreceptor activation. Cocaine (40 mg/kg per day) was administered to rats for 14 days either continuously by osmotic minipumps or intermittently by once-a-day injections. Minipumps containing saline were implanted in the control group. After 7 days of withdrawal, dopamine kinetics in the caudate was examined using in vitro fast-scan cyclic voltammetry. This technique provides very rapid measurements of dopamine in the extracellular space. Thus, when combined with endogenous dopamine efflux evoked by single-pulse, electrical stimulations, it was possible directly to measure the release and uptake components of the efflux. In the absence of pharmacological agents, no group differences were found in the amount of baseline dopamine released or in the uptake kinetics; the potency of bath-applied cocaine (0.03–60 µM) in inhibiting the uptake was also unaltered in either group. In contrast, the potency of quinpirole (an autoreceptor agonist, 5–250 nM) was significantly decreased and increased in the cocaine injection and pump groups, respectively. Thus, the cocaine administration regimen which produces sensitization results in a functional subsensitivity of release-modulating autoreceptors, while the tolerance-producing regimen results in autoreceptor supersensitivity.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-2072
    Keywords: Key words Cocaine ; Endogenous dopamine ; Caged-dopamine ; Uptake inhibition ; Nucleus accumbens ; Voltammetry
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Using in vitro fast scan cyclic voltammetry, we measured cocaine potency for inhibiting dopamine uptake/clearance in accumbens slices 7 days after withdrawal from chronic cocaine pretreatments. Rats were pretreated with 40 mg/kg per day for 14 days, either via continuous osmotic minipumps or by once-daily injections. The cocaine potency was subsequently assessed for endogenous and exogenous dopamine applied via single-pulse electrical stimulation and caged-dopamine photolysis, respectively. Under baseline conditions, no differences in either endogenous or exogenous dopamine kinetics were observed in the two cocaine pretreatment groups. In contrast, the potency of bath-applied cocaine for inhibiting endogenous dopamine uptake was enhanced in the intermittent injection group with no change in the continuous infusion group. The selective increase in the cocaine potency following injections was also demonstrable for clearance of photo-applied DA. The enhanced cocaine potency in the accumbens slices following 7 days of withdrawal is consistent with the residual sensitization to cocaine-induced locomotion following daily cocaine injections. Behavioral tolerance following continuous infusion, on the other hand, may be mediated via a mechanism distinct from altered dopamine uptake.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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