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Role of Acetylcholine Receptors and Dopamine Transporter in Regulation of Extracellular Dopamine in Rat Carotid Body Cultures Grown in Chronic Hypoxia or Nicotine
Author(s) -
Jackson Adele,
Nurse Colin A.
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
journal of neurochemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.75
H-Index - 229
eISSN - 1471-4159
pISSN - 0022-3042
DOI - 10.1046/j.1471-4159.1998.70020653.x
Subject(s) - dopamine , nicotine , carotid body , acetylcholine , hypoxia (environmental) , dopamine transporter , dopamine receptor , extracellular , acetylcholine receptor , d1 like receptor , neurotransmitter , dopamine plasma membrane transport proteins , neuroscience , receptor , chemistry , medicine , endocrinology , pharmacology , biology , dopamine receptor d1 , dopaminergic , carotid arteries , biochemistry , oxygen , organic chemistry
Using dissociated rat carotid body (CB) cultures, we compared levels of extracellular dopamine (DA) around oxygen‐sensitive glomus cells grown for ∼12 days in normoxia (Nox; 20% O 2 ), chronic hypoxia (CHox; 6% O 2 ), or chronic nicotine (CNic; 10 µ M nicotine, 20% O 2 ), with or without acetylcholine (ACh) receptor (AChR) agonists/antagonists and blockers of DA uptake. In Nox cultures, extracellular DA, determined by HPLC and normalized to the number of tyrosine hydroxylase‐positive glomus cells present, was augmented by acute (∼15‐min) exposure to hypoxia (5% O 2 ; ∼6× basal), high extracellular K + (30 m M ; ∼10× basal), nomifensine (1 µ M ; a selective DA uptake inhibitor; ∼3× basal), and nicotine (100 µ M ; ∼5× basal), but not methylcholine (300 µ M ; a specific muscarinic agonist). In contrast, in CHox cultures where basal DA release is markedly elevated (∼9× control), the stimulatory effect of high K + (3–4× basal) and acute hypoxia (∼2× basal) on DA release persisted, but nicotine and nomifensine were no longer effective and methylcholine had a partial inhibitory effect. In CNic cultures, basal DA levels were also elevated (∼9× control), similar to that in CHox cultures; however, although acute hypoxia had a stimulatory effect on DA release (∼2× basal), nicotine, nomifensine, and high K + were ineffective. The elevated basal DA in both CHox and CNic cultures was attenuated by acute or chronic treatment with mecamylamine (100 µ M ), a nicotinic AChR (nAChR) antagonist. In addition, long‐term (16‐h), but not acute (15‐min), treatment with the muscarinic antagonist atropine (1 µ M ) produced an additional enhancement of basal DA levels in CHox cultures. Thus, after chronic hypoxia or nicotine in vitro, extracellular DA levels around CB chemoreceptor cell clusters appear to be set by a variety of factors including released ACh, positive and negative feedback regulation via nAChRs and muscarinic AChRs, respectively, and modulation of DA transporters. These results provide insight into roles of endogenous transmitters in the adaptation of CB chemoreceptors to chronic hypoxia and suggest pathways by which neuroactive drugs, e.g., nicotine, can interfere with the protective chemoreflex response against hypoxia.

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