 |
Previous Article
The Journal of Neuroscience, August 1, 2001, 21(15):5841-5846
Blockade of D1 Dopamine Receptors in the Ventral Tegmental Area
Decreases Cocaine Reward: Possible Role for Dendritically Released
Dopamine
Robert
Ranaldi1 and
Roy
A.
Wise2
1 Department of Psychology, Queens College, City
University of New York, Flushing, New York 11367, and
2 Behavioral Neuroscience Branch, Intramural Research
Program, National Institute on Drug Abuse, National Institutes of
Health, Baltimore, Maryland 21224
 |
ABSTRACT |
This study was designed to assess the involvement of D1 dopamine
actions in the ventral tegmental area (VTA) on intravenous cocaine
self-administration. Rats were trained to self-administer intravenous
injections of cocaine (1.0 mg/kg per injection) on a fixed-ratio 1 (FR-1) schedule or a progressive ratio (PR) schedule of reinforcement
and then were tested under the influence of bilateral VTA injections of
the D1 dopamine receptor antagonist SCH 23390 or the 5-HT2 receptor
antagonist ketanserin. SCH 23390 increased cocaine self-administration
on the FR-1 schedule but decreased it on the PR schedule. Injections of
ketanserin were ineffective, as were injections of SCH 23390 in a site
1 mm dorsal or 1 mm rostral to the effective VTA site. These data
suggest a role for dendritically released dopamine, presumably acting
through D1 receptors located on the axons of GABAergic or glutamatergic
inputs to the VTA, in the effectiveness of cocaine reward.
Key words:
drug abuse; reinforcement; dendritic release; motivation; operant learning; progressive ratio schedule
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Brain dopamine (DA) plays important
roles in the rewarding effects of natural rewards such as food (Wise et
al., 1978 ; Ettenberg and Camp, 1986a ), water (Gerber et al., 1981 ;
Ettenberg and Camp, 1986b ), and sexual contact (Pfaus and Phillips,
1989 ) and in the laboratory reward of lateral hypothalamic electrical
stimulation (Fouriezos and Wise, 1976 ; Franklin, 1978 ; Wise and
Rompré, 1989 ). The mesocorticolimbic DA system, which originates
in the ventral tegmental area (VTA) and terminates in various forebrain
structures (Bjorklund and Lindvall, 1986 ), is also implicated in the
rewarding effects of several drugs of abuse, including cocaine,
amphetamine, heroin, and nicotine (Wise, 1996 ; Bardo, 1998 ). Each of
these drug reinforcers causes elevations in extracellular dopamine
levels at the axon terminals of the mesocorticolimbic DA system
(Zetterström et al., 1983 ; Di Chiara and Imperato, 1988 ;
Moghaddam and Bunney, 1989 ). In the case of cocaine, the enhanced
extracellular DA concentrations are caused by a blockade of the
reuptake of DA back into presynaptic terminals. Destruction of
dopaminergic terminals (Roberts et al., 1977 ) or dopaminergic synaptic
targets (Zito et al., 1985 ) in the nucleus accumbens (NAcc), a
mesolimbic terminal region, disrupts responding maintained by cocaine.
Injection of D1 dopamine receptor antagonists into the NAcc (Maldonado
et al., 1993 ; McGregor and Roberts, 1993 ), the medial prefrontal cortex
(McGregor and Roberts, 1995 ), or, to a lesser extent, the amygdala
(McGregor and Roberts, 1993 ), reduces cocaine reward. Thus it is widely
assumed that it is dopamine released at the terminals of the
mesocorticolimbic system that is important for reward function
(Fibiger, 1978 ; Wise, 1978 ; Koob and Bloom, 1988 ; Wise, 1996 ; Berridge
and Robinson, 1998 ).
In addition to increasing extracellular levels of DA at the level of
the axon terminals of the mesocorticolimbic system, cocaine also
increases extracellular DA at the level of the dendrites in the VTA
(Bradberry and Roth, 1989 ; Chen and Reith, 1994 ). Although dendritically released DA has been shown to be involved in the acute
locomotor effects of psychostimulants (Jackson and Kelly, 1983 ; Stewart
and Vezina, 1989 ; LaHoste and Marshall, 1990 ), a role for dendritically
released dopamine in reward function has not been reported. The
neurochemical and neuroanatomical arrangements of the VTA, however,
suggest that dendritically released DA may indeed be involved in
cocaine reward. Dendritically released DA in the VTA acts on D1
receptors located on the terminals of GABAergic and
glutamatergic inputs originating in forebrain regions (Sesack and
Pickel, 1992 ; Smith et al., 1996 ; Steffensen et al., 1998 ). GABA and
glutamate in the VTA modulate the activity of dopaminergic and
GABAergic output cells (Albin et al., 1992 ; Nakanishi, 1992 ; Overton
and Clark, 1992 ; Kalivas, 1993 ; Zhang et al., 1994 ; Christoffersen and
Meltzer, 1995 ). Thus, by modulating the release of GABA and glutamate,
which in turn modulate DA cell activity and output, dendritically
released DA could play a significant role in cocaine reward. We tested
this hypothesis by investigating the effects of intra- and peri-VTA
injections of the D1 DA receptor antagonist SCH 23390 or the 5-HT2
receptor antagonist ketanserin on cocaine self-administration in rats.
Ketanserin was tested as a control because, in addition to being a
potent antagonist at the D1 DA receptor, SCH 23390 is a weak antagonist
at the 5-HT2 receptor, which is also found in the VTA. Our results
support the hypothesis that dendritically released DA in the VTA
affects the rewarding effectiveness of cocaine.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Subjects and surgery. Subjects were male Long-Evans
rats (Charles River Canada, Saint Constant, Québec, Canada; and
Harlan, Indianapolis, IN) weighing between 350 and 400 gm at the time of surgery. Each was kept on a 12 hr light/dark cycle with the dark
phase starting at 7 A.M. and had free access to food (Purina rat chow)
and water except during self-administration sessions. Each rat was
implanted, under sodium pentobarbital anesthesia (65 mg/kg, i.p.), with
bilateral guide cannulas (20 gauge) aimed at the VTA or at control
sites either 1 mm rostral or 1 mm dorsal to the VTA. For guide cannula
implantations into the VTA, the flat-skull (Paxinos and Watson, 1986 )
coordinates were 5.6 mm caudal to bregma, ±2.2 mm lateral to the
midline (angled at 10° toward the midline to bypass the sagittal
sinus), and 7.3 mm below the surface of the skull. For the rostral
control site, the coordinates were 4.6 mm caudal to bregma, ±2.2 mm
from the midline, and 7.3 mm below the surface of the skull. For the
dorsal control site, the coordinates were 5.6 mm caudal to bregma,
±2.2 mm from the midline, and 6.3 mm below the surface of the skull.
Obturators extended 1 mm beyond the guide cannulas and were kept there
until the time of testing.
While under anesthesia, each rat was fitted with a permanently
indwelling jugular catheter. An incision was made in the neck and the
jugular vein was isolated and opened. A Silastic intravenous catheter
(Dow Corning, Midland, MI) was inserted into the vein so that the tip
penetrated to a position just short of the right atrium. The other end
of the catheter was fed subcutaneously to the back of the neck and
exited through an opening at the back of the skull. A bent 22 gauge
stainless steel tube was inserted into the catheter and secured to the
rat's skull with dental cement anchored by stainless steel screws.
This tube served as a connector between the intravenous catheter and
the drug infusion line. The catheter was flushed with a heparin-saline
solution (200 U/ml) immediately after surgery and daily thereafter.
Cocaine self-administration training. One day after surgery,
the animals began cocaine self-administration training. All
self-administration sessions (training and test) were conducted during
the dark phase. Each animal was placed daily in a 26 × 26 × 30 cm operant chamber equipped with an operant lever mounted 10 cm from
the floor. A white cue light was mounted 3 cm above the lever, and each
cage had a hanging water bottle. The rat was connected by polyethylene tubing, through a fluid swivel, to a syringe in a syringe pump (Razel;
1 rpm). Each lever press activated the syringe pump and cue light for
14 sec, causing the intravenous delivery of 1.0 mg/kg cocaine in a
0.125 ml volume of saline. During drug delivery, lever presses were
counted but had no other consequence. Thus, the rats learned to lever
press under a fixed ratio 1 (FR-1) schedule of reinforcement. Some rats
were tested on this schedule of reinforcement, whereas others were
switched, after responding stabilized, to a progressive ratio (PR)
schedule. Stable responding on the FR-1 schedule was defined as three
consecutive sessions during which the total number of responses did not
vary by >10% from the mean of the three sessions; rats met this
criterion between 11 and 20 training sessions.
On a PR schedule of reinforcement, the ratio of responses per infusion
was increased after each infusion according to an exponential function.
In the present study, the response requirements in the progression were
calculated by the formula, responses = 5 × e(inj # ×
0.2) 5. The ratios in the progression
were 1, 2, 4, 6, 9, 12, 15, 20, 25, 32, 40, 50, 62, 77, 95, and so on.
Eventually, as the ratio requirement increased, the rats ceased to
respond. The step at which rats stopped responding was referred to as
the break point (BP). For the present experiments, the BP was
operationally defined as the final ratio completed within 1 hr of the
previously earned injection. A stable BP was operationally defined as
three consecutive BPs that did not differ by >10% from their mean;
rats met this criterion between 15 and 20 training sessions.
Microinjections of SCH 23390 or ketanserin. On test days,
the animals were pretreated with VTA microinjections of SCH 23390 or
ketanserin. Fifteen rats were tested under the influence of intra-VTA
injections of SCH 23390, and 10 were tested under intra-VTA ketanserin
under the FR-1 schedule of reinforcement. Ten rats were tested with
intra-VTA injections of SCH 23390 under a PR schedule of reinforcement.
Four rats were tested under a PR schedule with microinjections of SCH
23390 in sites just rostral to the VTA, and five were tested with SCH
23390 in sites just dorsal to the VTA site.
Just before these test sessions, the obturator was removed from one of
the guide cannulas, and a stainless steel injector cannula was inserted
into that guide cannula for each animal. The injector extended beyond
the guide cannula by 1 mm. The injector was connected through
polyethylene tubing to a 10 µl Hamilton (Reno, NV) syringe that was
preloaded with SCH 23390 (1, 2, or 4 µg/0.5 µl), ketanserin (2, 4, or 8 µg/0.5 µl) or vehicle (of which 96% of the volume consisted
of artificial CSF and the rest of methanol). The test compound was
delivered by motorized syringe pump in a volume of 0.5 µl over 30 sec. The injector was kept in place for an additional 60 sec. The
injector was then removed, and the obturator was replaced into the
guide cannula. This procedure was repeated for the contralateral side.
At the end of the second microinjection, the rat was placed in the
operant chamber, and the test session (either FR-1 or PR) was started.
The animals were tested at 4 d intervals with as many of the doses
or vehicle as possible; 3 d of treatment-free testing intervened between microinjection treatments. If the total number of injections on
the session after the test session did not fall within 10% of the mean
of the three sessions preceding the test session, then the data from
that test session were not used. If after a test session, baseline
response rates did not meet the stability criterion (three consecutive
sessions in which the total number of injections per session was within
10% of the mean for the three sessions), treatment-free testing
continued. If more than seven sessions passed in which the stability
criterion was not met, the rat was removed from the experiment; two
animals were removed for this reason. Animals were also removed from
the experiment when catheters were blocked or began to leak or when
head assemblies became dislodged. Sixteen of the FR-1 animals and seven
of the PR animals failed to complete testing at one or more dose levels.
Histology. After its last test session, each rat was
anesthetized with sodium pentobarbital, perfused with saline followed by 10% formalin, and decapitated. The brains were removed and stored
in 10% formalin for at least 7 d before being cut in 40 µm
serial sections, stained with thionin, and inspected for cannula implantation and injection sites.
Data analysis. The total number of infusions per session for
the FR-1 or PR schedule was analyzed. Separate one-way ANOVAs were
conducted on the data from the groups receiving intra-VTA doses of SCH
23390 or ketanserin under the FR-1 schedule of reinforcement. A
separate one-way ANOVA was conducted on the data from the group receiving intra-VTA doses of SCH 23390 under the PR schedule. A final
one-way ANOVA was conducted on the data from the groups receiving the
4.0 µg/0.5 µl dose of SCH 23390 in the VTA, the site just dorsal to
the VTA, and the site just rostral to the VTA. Site comparisons were
made using Scheffé tests. Because not all animals completed every
treatment condition in either experiment, we used a between-subjects
ANOVA model. A within-subjects model would have overestimated
statistical significance; the between-subjects model is more conservative.
Drugs. Cocaine hydrochloride (National Institute on Drug
Abuse, Rockville, MD) was dissolved in saline. SCH 23390 and ketanserin (Research Biochemical Inc., Natick, MA) were dissolved in 4% methanol and 96% artificial CSF.
 |
RESULTS |
Microinjections of SCH 23390 into the VTA produced a dose-orderly
increase in the number of cocaine infusions self-administered on an
FR-1 schedule of reinforcement (Fig.
1a)
(F(3,17) = 13.86; p < 0.001). At the highest dose, SCH 23390 increased cocaine intake to
values twice as high as were observed after control vehicle injections.
Response records taken in the baseline (no injection) and SCH 23390 conditions both showed well spaced cocaine intake that continued to be
regular throughout the period of cocaine availability (Fig.
1b). However, the rate of cocaine intake was higher in the
SCH 23390 condition than in the baseline or vehicle condition,
especially during the first half of the test sessions. On average, the
animals responded approximately once every 4 min under the high-dose
SCH 23390 condition and once every 7 min under the baseline or vehicle
condition. Microinjections of ketanserin into the VTA did not affect
rate of cocaine self-administration (Fig. 1a)
(F(3,18) = 0.23; p > 0.9).

View larger version (17K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 1.
a, Mean ± SEM effects of SCH
23390 (and ketanserin) on cocaine self-administration under an FR-1
schedule of reinforcement. b, Event records reflecting
the response rate and pattern of responding for a subject under
baseline conditions and after vehicle or SCH 23390 treatment. Note the
immediate acceleration and subsequent return toward a normal response
rate after SCH 23390 treatment.
|
|
In the case of the PR schedule, microinjections of SCH 23390 decreased
responding (Fig. 2a)
(F(3,30) = 12.38; p < 0.001). At the highest dose, SCH 23390 reduced the mean number of
cocaine infusions to 27% of the mean observed under vehicle control
conditions. Cumulative response records taken in the vehicle condition
showed alternations between periods of high response rates followed by postreinforcement pauses (no responding) that are typically seen during
cocaine self-administration on PR schedules of reinforcement. Cumulative response records taken in the SCH 23390 condition also showed this typical PR pattern of responding, except that responding ended earlier in the session at lower final response ratios (Fig. 2b). Whereas the animals made a mean of 57 lever presses for
the final earned injection under the vehicle condition, they made means
of only 33, 14, and 4 responses for the final earned injections under
the 1, 2, and 4 µg/0.5 µl SCH 23390 conditions, respectively (Table
1).

View larger version (16K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 2.
a, Mean ± SEM effects of SCH
23390 on BP for cocaine self-administration under a PR schedule of
reinforcement. b, Cumulative response records reflecting
the total number of responses and the pattern of responding for a
subject after vehicle or SCH 23390 (4 µg/0.5 µl) treatment.
|
|
View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Table 1.
Effects of intra-VTA SCH 23390 on mean final ratios
completed in the progressive ratio series and on mean cumulative
responses
|
|
Microinjections of the 4 µg/0.5 µl dose of SCH 23390 into a site 1 mm dorsal or into a site 1 mm rostral to the VTA injection site also
produced decreases in PR responding, but these reductions were
significantly smaller than those observed after microinjection of this
dose of SCH 23390 into the VTA (Fig. 3)
(F(2,15) = 13.62; p < 0.001). Scheffé comparisons between the VTA and the dorsal site
and between the VTA and the rostral site confirmed that responding was
significantly less depressed when SCH 23390 was injected dorsal or
rostral to the VTA site (F(1,15) = 21.07; p < 0.001; and
F(1,15) = 14.94; p < 0.01, respectively).

View larger version (29K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 3.
Depression of progressive ratio BP as a function
of site of microinjection. The dorsal and rostral control sites were
each 1 mm from the VTA site where the drug was most effective. The
vehicle value represents the average of the vehicle data taken from the
VTA and the dorsal and rostral sites. * or indicate paired
comparisons that showed significant differences.
|
|
Figure 4 shows the locations of the
cannula tips. Microinjections aimed at the anatomical control sites
were ~1 mm rostral and 1 mm dorsal to the VTA region (Fig. 4).

View larger version (67K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 4.
Histological reconstruction of injection sites
adapted from Paxinos and Watson (1986) . Black circles,
SCH 23390 or ketanserin; gray circles, dorsal controls;
black squares, rostral controls.
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
Microinjections of SCH 23390 into the VTA increased rates of
cocaine self-administration on an FR-1 schedule of reinforcement and,
at the same doses, decreased BPs on a PR schedule of reinforcement. Together these data suggest that blockade of D1 DA receptors in the VTA
reduces the rewarding effectiveness of self-administered cocaine. The
fact that intra-VTA injections of SCH 23390 affected response rates in
opposite directions depending on the schedule of reinforcement under
which the rats were responding argues against the possibility that VTA
SCH 23390 had a simple, nonspecific effect on motoric output. Had SCH
23390 enhanced or impaired the ability of animals to perform the lever
press response, then it would have produced changes in the same
direction under the two schedules of reinforcement. Rather, the data
suggest a motivational interpretation.
In the present study, animals responding under the FR-1 schedule and
pretreated with intra-VTA SCH 23390 continued to display the pattern of
regularly spaced infusions that was seen after no or vehicle
pretreatment. Thus cocaine was still sufficiently rewarding to maintain
stable responding under the SCH 23390 conditions. However, each earned
injection satisfied (satiated) the animal for a shorter duration under
SCH 23390 conditions than under normal conditions. Cocaine is thought
to be effective because it elevates extracellular dopamine levels, and
the generally accepted interpretation of neuroleptic-induced increases
in stimulant self-administration is that increased dopamine
concentrations are needed to overcome the competitive antagonism of
dopamine receptors (Yokel and Wise, 1975 , 1976 ; de Wit and Wise, 1977 ;
Ettenberg et al., 1982 ).
The interpretation that blockade of VTA D1 receptors reduced the
rewarding effectiveness of cocaine fits well with the decrease in BPs
observed in rats responding under the PR schedule of reinforcement. In
this paradigm, the number of lever presses required for successive injections was increased exponentially until the animal ceased continuing to respond. The BP, the response requirement at which the
animal stops lever pressing, is taken as an index of the animal's motivation under a given reward condition (Richardson and Roberts, 1996 ). When a treatment reduces the BP for a given reward, it is
thought to have done so by reducing the effectiveness of the rewarding
event. By this test, again, intra-VTA SCH 23390 appears to reduce the
rewarding effectiveness of self-administered cocaine. These findings
are the first to suggest a functional role for dendritically released
dopamine in reward function.
The present experiments with intra-VTA injections of ketanserin and
peri-VTA injections of SCH 23390 were conducted to rule out the
possibilities that the effects of intra-VTA injections of SCH 23390 were attributable to blockade of 5-HT2 receptors or to actions in
distal sites. Although SCH 23390 is the classic antagonist of D1 DA
receptors (Hyttel, 1983 ; Iorio et al., 1983 ) it also has high affinity
for and antagonist actions at 5-HT2 receptors (Hicks et al., 1984 ;
Bischoff et al., 1986 ; Hoyer et al., 1989 ; Briggs et al., 1991 ;
Woodward et al., 1992 ; Ciccocioppo et al., 1997 ;
Eberle-Wang et al., 1997 ). Ketanserin shares the ability to block 5-HT2
receptors (Leysen et al., 1981 ) but does not block D1 DA receptors. It
is known that systemic injections of 5-HT2 antagonists fail to affect
rate or BP in rats self-administering cocaine (Porrino et al., 1989 ;
Lacosta and Roberts, 1993 ), suggesting that 5-HT2 receptors, in the VTA
or elsewhere, are likely not involved in cocaine reward. However, there
are 5-HT2 receptors in the VTA (Kalivas, 1993 ), and thus we used
ketanserin to rule out the possibility that blockade of these receptors
was significant in the effects of SCH 23390. The present data argue
against this possibility. Ketanserin failed to affect cocaine
self-administration, ruling out the possibility that 5-HT2 actions of
SCH 23390 played a role in the SCH 23390 effects.
To address the possibility that intra-VTA injections of SCH 23390 diffuse to and act at distal sites, we investigated the effects of two
peri-VTA injections of this compound on cocaine self-administration.
Injection of substances directly into the brain is associated with a
hydraulic pressure that can drive the substance toward the pressure
sinks of ventricles and extrapial spaces. The most prominent diffusion
is up the cannula shaft, particularly if the cannula penetrates a
ventricle (Johnson and Epstein, 1975 ; Wise and Hoffman, 1992 ). To
assess this possibility, we tested injections just dorsal and just
rostral to our VTA site. Although microinjections of SCH 23390 into
each of these sites decreased responding on the progressive ratio
schedule, in each case the effect was less than was seen with the
primary VTA injections. This rules out the possibility of dorsal or
rostral diffusion to a distal site of action; rather, it seems likely
that diffusion to the VTA accounts for the weaker effects of injections
into each of these control sites.
The mechanism of the reward-depressing effects of SCH 23390 in the VTA
remains to be determined. The VTA is the site of origin of DA cells
projecting to various forebrain structures (Bjorklund and Lindvall,
1986 ). There are no DA afferents to the VTA; thus the only source of DA
here is dendritic release. Cocaine binds to DA transporters on the
dendrites and dendritic spines of DA cells in the VTA (Ma et al.,
1999 ). By blocking dendritic DA uptake, cocaine increases local DA
concentrations (Kalivas and Duffy, 1993 ). There are no D1 DA receptors
on dopaminergic (DAergic) neurons, however; D1 DA receptors in the VTA
are localized on glutamate and GABA afferents to the VTA (Harrison et
al., 1990 ; Herkenham et al., 1991 ; Yung et al., 1995 ; Lu et al., 1997 ),
and the effect of DA at these receptors is to facilitate the release of
these neurotransmitters (Starr, 1987 ; Cameron and Williams, 1993 ;
Kalivas and Duffy, 1995 ). Glutamate excites VTA DAergic and non-DAergic
neurons (Albin et al., 1992 ; Nakanishi, 1992 ; Carr and Sesack, 2000 )
and GABAergic neurons (Overton and Clark, 1992 ; Zhang et al., 1994 ;
Christoffersen and Meltzer, 1995 ). GABA inhibits both DAergic neurons
(Kalivas, 1993 ) and nearby GABAergic projection neurons, some of which,
in turn, inhibit their dopaminergic neighbors, probably via local
collaterals (Tepper et al., 1995 ). Thus dendritic DA, through D1
receptor activation, can affect local glutamate and GABA
concentrations, which can, in turn, control DAergic neurons directly
and, through GABA collaterals, indirectly. Given the known role of
these DA cells in cocaine reward, any effect on their activity can be
predicted to affect cocaine reward one way or the other. The role of
GABAergic output cells in cocaine reward is not known, but some of them
project to the NAcc, where they, too, might play a role in reward function.
The present finding that dendritically released DA in the VTA can play
a significant role in cocaine reward adds a new level of complexity to
our understanding of reward circuitry in particular and DAergic
circuitry in general. DA transmission in the terminal regions of the
mesocorticolimbic system has long been implicated in cocaine reward.
The output neurons of NAcc project, through a complex anatomical
cascade of GABAergic feedback, back to the VTA. Thus the VTA DAergic
somata are positioned to release DA at both the cell bodies and the
terminals of descending GABAergic pathways. Similarly, the mesocortical
DA system releases DA at both the cell bodies and the descending
terminals of the corticotegmental glutamate pathway. The present data
support the hypothesis that feedback signals to the VTA contribute to
reward function and to other functions of tegmental (both VTA and
perhaps similarly substantia nigra) DAergic neurons. The
mesocorticolimbic DA system is an important component of a general
arousal system that plays significant roles in both the anticipation
(Apicella et al., 1992 ; Schultz, 1997 ) and the reception (Wise and
Rompré, 1989 ; Berridge and Robinson, 1998 ) of reward signals. It
is not surprising that dysfunction of such a broadly projecting and
servoregulated system plays a critical role in motivation and addiction
(Fibiger, 1978 ; Wise, 1978 ; Koob and Bloom, 1988 ). Similarly,
dysfunction of the nigrostriatal DA system contributes importantly to
such divergent phenomena as the motor symptoms of Parkinson's disease
and the cognitive and emotional symptoms of schizophrenia. The present findings suggest the possibility that dendritic release of DA in the
substantia nigra plays roles in these syndromes as well.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Jan. 16, 2001; revised April 18, 2001; accepted May 21, 2001.
This research was initiated at Concordia University (Montréal,
Québec, Canada), where it was supported by grants from the Medical Research Council of Canada, the National Institute on Drug
Abuse of the United States (Grant DA1720), and Fonds pour la Formation
de Chercheurs et l'Aide à la Recherche (Québec), and
completed at the University of Mississippi Medical Center under a
National Institute on Drug Abuse contract. We thank Zafiro Koty for
excellent technical assistance.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Robert Ranaldi, Department of
Psychology, Queens College, City University of New York, 65-30 Kissena
Boulevard, Flushing, NY 11367. E-mail: Robert_Ranaldi{at}qc.edu.
 |
REFERENCES |
-
Albin RL,
Makowiec RL,
Hollingsworth ZR,
Dure IV LS,
Penney JB,
Young AB
(1992)
Excitatory amino acid binding sites in the basal ganglia of the rat: a quantitative autoradiographic study.
Neuroscience
46:35-48[ISI][Medline].
-
Apicella P,
Scarnati E,
Ljungberg T,
Schultz W
(1992)
Neuronal activity in monkey striatum related to the expectation of predictable environmental events.
J Neurophysiol
68:945-960[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Bardo MT
(1998)
Neuropharmacological mechanisms of drug reward: beyond dopamine in the nucleus accumbens.
Crit Rev Neurobiol
12:37-67[ISI][Medline].
-
Berridge KC,
Robinson TE
(1998)
What is the role of dopamine in reward: hedonic impact, reward learning, or incentive salience?
Brain Res Rev
28:309-369[Medline].
-
Bischoff S,
Heinrich M,
Sonntag JM,
Krauss J
(1986)
The D-1 dopamine receptor antagonist SCH 23390 also interacts potently with brain serotonin (5-HT2) receptors.
Eur J Pharmacol
129:367-370[ISI][Medline].
-
Bjorklund A,
Lindvall O
(1986)
Catecholaminergic brainstem regulatory systems.
In: Handbook of physiology: the nervous system, Vol IV, Intrinsic regulatory systems of the brain (Mountcastle VB,
Bloom FE,
Geiger SR,
eds), pp 155-235. Bethesda, MD: American Physiological Society.
-
Bradberry CW,
Roth RH
(1989)
Cocaine increases extracellular dopamine in rat nucleus accumbens and ventral tegmental area as shown by in vivo microdialysis.
Neurosci Lett
103:97-102[ISI][Medline].
-
Briggs CA,
Pollock NJ,
Frail DE,
Paxson DL,
Rakowski RF,
Kang CH,
Kebabian JW
(1991)
Activation of the 5-HT1C receptor expressed in Xenopus oocytes by the benzazepines SCH 23390 and SKF 38393.
Br J Pharmacol
104:1038-1044[ISI][Medline].
-
Cameron DL,
Williams JT
(1993)
Dopamine D1 receptors facilitate transmitter release.
Nature
366:344-347[Medline].
-
Carr DB,
Sesack SR
(2000)
Projections from the rat prefrontal cortex to the ventral tegmental area: target specificity in the synaptic associations with mesoaccumbens and mesocortical neurons.
J Neurosci
20:3964-3873[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Chen NH,
Reith ME
(1994)
Autoregulation and monoamine interactions in the ventral tegmental area in the absence and presence of cocaine: a microdialysis study in freely moving rats.
J Pharmacol Exp Ther
271:1597-1610[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Christoffersen CL,
Meltzer LT
(1995)
Evidence for N-methyl-D-aspartate and AMPA subtypes of the glutamate receptor on substantia nigra dopamine neurons: possible preferential role for N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors.
Neuroscience
67:373-381[ISI][Medline].
-
Ciccocioppo R,
Ge J,
Barnes NM,
Cooper SJ
(1997)
Autoradiographic mapping of brain 5-HT2A binding sites in P and in AA alcohol-preferring rats.
Brain Res Bull
44:33-37[Medline].
-
de Wit H,
Wise RA
(1977)
Blockade of cocaine reinforcement in rats with the dopamine receptor blocker pimozide, but not with noradrenergic blockers phentolamine and phenoxybenzamine.
Can J Psychol
31:195-203[ISI][Medline].
-
Di Chiara G,
Imperato A
(1988)
Drugs abused by humans preferentially increase synaptic dopamine concentrations in the mesolimbic system of freely moving rats.
Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
85:5274-5278[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Eberle-Wang K,
Mikeladze Z,
Uryu K,
Chesselet MF
(1997)
Pattern of expression of the serotonin 2C receptor messenger RNA in the basal ganglia of adult rats.
J Comp Neurol
384:233-247[ISI][Medline].
-
Ettenberg A,
Camp CH
(1986a)
Haloperidol induces a partial reinforcement extinction effect in rats: implications for a dopamine involvement in food reward.
Pharmacol Biochem Behav
25:813-821[ISI][Medline].
-
Ettenberg A,
Camp CH
(1986b)
A partial reinforcement extinction effect in water-reinforced rats intermittently treated with haloperidol.
Pharmacol Biochem Behav
25:1231-1235[Medline].
-
Ettenberg A,
Pettit HO,
Bloom FE,
Koob GF
(1982)
Heroin and cocaine intravenous self-administration in rats: mediation by separate neural systems.
Psychopharmacology
78:204-209[Medline].
-
Fibiger HC
(1978)
Drugs and reinforcement mechanisms: a critical review of the catecholamine theory.
Ann Rev Pharmacol Toxicol
18:37-56[ISI][Medline].
-
Fouriezos G,
Wise RA
(1976)
Pimozide-induced extinction of intracranial self-stimulation: response patterns rule out motor or performance deficits.
Brain Res
103:377-380[ISI][Medline].
-
Franklin K
(1978)
Catecholamines and self-stimulation: reward and performance effects dissociated.
Pharmacol Biochem Behav
9:813-820[Medline].
-
Gerber GJ,
Sing J,
Wise RA
(1981)
Pimozide attenuates lever pressing for water reinforcement in rats.
Pharmacol Biochem Behav
14:201-205[ISI][Medline].
-
Harrison MB,
Wiley RG,
Wooten GF
(1990)
Selective localization of striatal D1 receptors to striatonigral neurons.
Brain Res
528:317-322[ISI][Medline].
-
Herkenham M,
Lynn AB,
de Costa BR,
Richfield EK
(1991)
Neuronal localization of cannabinoid receptors in the basal ganglia of the rat.
Brain Res
547:267-274[ISI][Medline].
-
Hicks PE,
Schoemaker H,
Langer SZ
(1984)
5-HT receptor antagonist properties of SCH 23390 in vascular smooth muscle and brain.
Eur J Pharmacol
105:339-343[Medline].
-
Hoyer D,
Waeber C,
Schoeffter P,
Palacios JM,
Dravid A
(1989)
5-HT1C receptor-mediated stimulation of inositol phosphate production in pig choroid plexus. A pharmacological characterization.
Naunyn Schmiedebergs Arch Pharmacol
339:252-258[Medline].
-
Hyttel J
(1983)
SCH 23390: the first selective dopamine D1 antagonist.
Eur J Pharmacol
91:153-154[ISI][Medline].
-
Iorio LC,
Barnett A,
Leitz FH,
Houser VP,
Korduba CA
(1983)
SCH 23390, a potential benzazepine antipsychotic with unique interactions on dopaminergic systems.
J Pharmacol Exp Ther
226:462-468[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Jackson EA,
Kelly PH
(1983)
Nigral dopaminergic mechanisms in drug-induced circling.
Brain Res Bull
11:605-611[ISI][Medline].
-
Johnson AK,
Epstein AN
(1975)
The cerebral ventricles as the avenue for the dipsogenic action of intracranial angiotensin.
Brain Res
86:399-418[ISI][Medline].
-
Kalivas PW
(1993)
Neurotransmitter regulation of dopamine neurons in the ventral tegmental area.
Brain Res Rev
18:75-113[Medline].
-
Kalivas PW,
Duffy P
(1993)
Time course of extracellular dopamine and behavioral sensitization to cocaine. II. Dopamine perikarya.
J Neurosci
13:276-284[Abstract].
-
Kalivas PW,
Duffy P
(1995)
D1 receptors modulate glutamate transmission in the ventral tegmental area.
J Neurosci
15:5379-5388[Abstract].
-
Koob GF,
Bloom FE
(1988)
Cellular and molecular mechanisms of drug dependence.
Science
242:715-723[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Lacosta S,
Roberts DCS
(1993)
MDL 72222, ketanserin, and methysergide pretreatments fail to alter breaking points on a progressive ratio schedule reinforced by intravenous cocaine.
Pharmacol Biochem Behav
44:161-165[Medline].
-
LaHoste GJ,
Marshall JF
(1990)
Nigral D1 and striatal D2 receptors mediate the behavioral effects of dopamine agonists.
Behav Brain Res
38:233-242[ISI][Medline].
-
Leysen JE,
Awouters F,
Kennis L,
Laduron PM,
Vandenberk J,
Janssen PA
(1981)
Receptor binding profile of R 41 468, a novel antagonist at 5-HT2 receptors.
Life Sci
28:1015-1022[ISI][Medline].
-
Lu X-Y,
Churchill L,
Kalivas PW
(1997)
Expression of D1 receptor mRNA in projections from the forebrain to the ventral tegmental area.
Synapse
25:205-214[ISI][Medline].
-
Ma SY,
Ciliax BJ,
Stebbins G,
Jaffar S,
Joyce JN,
Cochran EJ,
Kardower JH,
Mash DC,
Levey AI,
Mufson EJ
(1999)
Dopamine transporter-immunoreactive neurons decrease with age in the human substantia nigra.
J Comp Neurol
409:25-37[ISI][Medline].
-
Maldonado R,
Robledo P,
Chover AJ,
Caine SB,
Koob GF
(1993)
D1 dopamine receptors in the nucleus accumbens modulate cocaine self-administration in the rat.
Pharmacol Biochem Behav
45:239-242[ISI][Medline].
-
McGregor A,
Roberts DCS
(1993)
Dopaminergic antagonism within the nucleus accumbens or the amygdala produces differential effects on intravenous cocaine self-administration under fixed and progressive ratio schedules of reinforcement.
Brain Res
624:245-252[ISI][Medline].
-
McGregor A,
Roberts DCS
(1995)
Effect of medial prefrontal cortex injections of SCH 23390 on intravenous cocaine self-administration under both a fixed and progressive ratio schedule of reinforcement.
Behav Brain Res
67:75-80[ISI][Medline].
-
Moghaddam B,
Bunney BS
(1989)
Differential effect of cocaine on extracellular dopamine levels in rat medial prefrontal cortex and nucleus accumbens: comparison to amphetamine.
Synapse
4:156-161[ISI][Medline].
-
Nakanishi S
(1992)
Molecular diversity of glutamate receptors and implications for brain function.
Science
258:597-603[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Overton P,
Clark D
(1992)
Iontophoretically administered drugs acting at the N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor modulate burst firing in A9 dopamine neurons in the rat.
Synapse
10:131-140[ISI][Medline].
-
Paxinos G,
Watson C
(1986)
In: The rat brain in stereotaxic coordinates. New York: Academic.
-
Pfaus JG,
Phillips AG
(1989)
Differential effects of dopamine receptor antagonists on the sexual behavior of male rats.
Psychopharmacology
98:363-368[Medline].
-
Porrino LJ,
Ritz MC,
Goodman NL,
Sharpe LG,
Kuhar MJ,
Goldberg SR
(1989)
Differential effects of the pharmacological manipulation of serotonin systems on cocaine and amphetamine self-administration in rats.
Life Sci
45:1529-1535[Medline].
-
Richardson NR,
Roberts DCS
(1996)
Progressive ratio schedules in drug self-administration studies in rats: a method to evaluate reinforcing efficacy.
J Neurosci Methods
66:1-11[ISI][Medline].
-
Roberts DCS,
Corcoran ME,
Fibiger HC
(1977)
On the role of ascending catecholaminergic systems in intravenous self-administration of cocaine.
Pharmacol Biochem Behav
6:615-620[ISI][Medline].
-
Schultz W
(1997)
A neural substrate of prediction and reward.
Science
275:1593-1599[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Sesack SR,
Pickel VM
(1992)
Prefrontal cortical efferents in the rat synapse on unlableled neuronal targets of catecholamine terminals in the nucleus accumbens septi and on dopamine neurons in the ventral tegmental area.
J Comp Neurol
320:145-160[ISI][Medline].
-
Smith Y,
Charara A,
Parent A
(1996)
Synaptic innervation of midbrain dopaminergic neurons by glutamate-enriched terminals in the squirrel monkey.
J Comp Neurol
364:231-253[ISI][Medline].
-
Starr M
(1987)
Opposing roles of dopamine D1 and D2 receptors in nigral [3H]aminobutyric acid release?
J Neurochem
49:1042-1049[ISI][Medline].
-
Steffensen SC,
Svingos AL,
Pickel VM,
Henriksen SJ
(1998)
Electrophysiological characterization of GABAergic neurons in the ventral tegmental area.
J Neurosci
18:8003-8015[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Stewart J,
Vezina P
(1989)
Microinjections of Sch-23390 into the ventral tegmental area and substantia nigra pars reticulata attenuate the development of sensitization to the locomotor activating effects of systemic amphetamine.
Brain Res
495:401-406[ISI][Medline].
-
Tepper JM,
Martin LP,
Anderson DR
(1995)
GABAA receptor-mediated inhibition of rat substantia nigra dopaminergic neurons by pars reticulata projection neurons.
J Neurosci
15:3092-3103[Abstract].
-
Wise RA
(1978)
Catecholamine theories of reward: a critical review.
Brain Res
152:215-247[ISI][Medline].
-
Wise RA
(1996)
Neurobiology of addiction.
Curr Opin Neurobiol
6:243-251[ISI][Medline].
-
Wise RA,
Hoffman DC
(1992)
Localization of drug reward mechanisms by intracranial injections.
Synapse
10:247-263[ISI][Medline].
-
Wise RA,
Rompré P-P
(1989)
Brain dopamine and reward.
Annu Rev Psychol
40:191-225[ISI][Medline].
-
Wise RA,
Spindler J,
deWit H,
Gerber GJ
(1978)
Neuroleptic-induced "anhedonia" in rats: pimozide blocks reward quality of food.
Science
201:262-264[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Woodward RM,
Panicker MM,
Miledi R
(1992)
Actions of dopamine and dopaminergic drugs on cloned serotonin receptors expressed in Xenopus oocytes.
Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
89:4708-4712[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Yokel RA,
Wise RA
(1975)
Increased lever pressing for amphetamine after pimozide in rats: implications for a dopamine theory of reward.
Science
187:547-549[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Yokel RA,
Wise RA
(1976)
Attenuation of intravenous amphetamine reinforcement by central dopamine blockade in rats.
Psychopharmacology
48:311-318[Medline].
-
Yung KK,
Bolam JP,
Smith AD,
Hersch SM,
Ciliax BJ,
Levey AI
(1995)
Immunocytochemical localization of D1 and D2 dopamine receptors in the basal ganglia of the rat: light and electron microscopy.
Neuroscience
65:709-730[ISI][Medline].
-
Zetterström T,
Sharp T,
Marsden CA,
Ungerstedt U
(1983)
In vivo measurement of dopamine and its metabolites by intracerebral dialysis: changes after D-amphetamine.
J Neurochem
41:1769-1773[ISI][Medline].
-
Zhang J,
Chiodo LA,
Freeman AS
(1994)
Influence of excitatory amino acid receptor subtypes on the electrophysiological activity of dopaminergic and nondopaminergic neurons in rat substantia nigra.
J Pharmacol Exp Ther
269:313-321[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Zito KA,
Vickers GJ,
Roberts DCS
(1985)
Disruption of cocaine and heroin self-administration following kainic acid lesions of the nucleus accumbens.
Pharmacol Biochem Behav
23:1029-1036[ISI][Medline].
Copyright © 2001 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/01/21155841-06$05.00/0
This article has been cited by other articles:

|
 |

|
 |
 
Z.-B. You, B. Wang, D. Zitzman, and R. A. Wise
Acetylcholine Release in the Mesocorticolimbic Dopamine System during Cocaine Seeking: Conditioned and Unconditioned Contributions to Reward and Motivation
J. Neurosci.,
September 3, 2008;
28(36):
9021 - 9029.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
J. M. Bossert, G. C. Poles, K. A. Wihbey, E. Koya, and Y. Shaham
Differential Effects of Blockade of Dopamine D1-Family Receptors in Nucleus Accumbens Core or Shell on Reinstatement of Heroin Seeking Induced by Contextual and Discrete Cues
J. Neurosci.,
November 14, 2007;
27(46):
12655 - 12663.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
Z. A. Rodd, R. L. Bell, K. A. Kuc, Y. Zhang, J. M. Murphy, and W. J. McBride
Intracranial Self-Administration of Cocaine within the Posterior Ventral Tegmental Area of Wistar Rats: Evidence for Involvement of Serotonin-3 Receptors and Dopamine Neurons
J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther.,
April 1, 2005;
313(1):
134 - 145.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
S. Ikemoto and R. A. Wise
Rewarding Effects of the Cholinergic Agents Carbachol and Neostigmine in the Posterior Ventral Tegmental Area
J. Neurosci.,
November 15, 2002;
22(22):
9895 - 9904.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
E. V. Kuzhikandathil and G. S. Oxford
Classic D1 Dopamine Receptor Antagonist R-(+)-7-Chloro-8-hydroxy-3-methyl-1-phenyl-2,3,4,5-tetrahydro-1H-3-benzazepine hydrochloride (SCH23390) Directly Inhibits G Protein-Coupled Inwardly Rectifying Potassium Channels
Mol. Pharmacol.,
July 1, 2002;
62(1):
119 - 126.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|
|