Amphetamine elicits opposing actions on readily releasable and reserve pools for dopamine.

Amphetamine, a highly addictive drug with therapeutic efficacy, exerts paradoxical effects on the fundamental communication modes employed by dopamine neurons in modulating behavior. While amphetamine elevates tonic dopamine signaling by depleting vesicular stores and driving non-exocytotic release...

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Main Authors: Dan P Covey, Steven A Juliano, Paul A Garris
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3643976?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-3c0868f3acd740eda20a2032d4325acc2020-11-24T20:50:41ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-0185e6076310.1371/journal.pone.0060763Amphetamine elicits opposing actions on readily releasable and reserve pools for dopamine.Dan P CoveySteven A JulianoPaul A GarrisAmphetamine, a highly addictive drug with therapeutic efficacy, exerts paradoxical effects on the fundamental communication modes employed by dopamine neurons in modulating behavior. While amphetamine elevates tonic dopamine signaling by depleting vesicular stores and driving non-exocytotic release through reverse transport, this psychostimulant also activates phasic dopamine signaling by up-regulating vesicular dopamine release. We hypothesized that these seemingly incongruent effects arise from amphetamine depleting the reserve pool and enhancing the readily releasable pool. This novel hypothesis was tested using in vivo voltammetry and stimulus trains of varying duration to access different vesicular stores. We show that amphetamine actions are stimulus dependent in the dorsal striatum. Specifically, amphetamine up-regulated vesicular dopamine release elicited by a short-duration train, which interrogates the readily releasable pool, but depleted release elicited by a long-duration train, which interrogates the reserve pool. These opposing actions of vesicular dopamine release were associated with concurrent increases in tonic and phasic dopamine responses. A link between vesicular depletion and tonic signaling was supported by results obtained for amphetamine in the ventral striatum and cocaine in both striatal sub-regions, which demonstrated augmented vesicular release and phasic signals only. We submit that amphetamine differentially targeting dopamine stores reconciles the paradoxical activation of tonic and phasic dopamine signaling. Overall, these results further highlight the unique and region-distinct cellular mechanisms of amphetamine and may have important implications for its addictive and therapeutic properties.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3643976?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dan P Covey
Steven A Juliano
Paul A Garris
spellingShingle Dan P Covey
Steven A Juliano
Paul A Garris
Amphetamine elicits opposing actions on readily releasable and reserve pools for dopamine.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Dan P Covey
Steven A Juliano
Paul A Garris
author_sort Dan P Covey
title Amphetamine elicits opposing actions on readily releasable and reserve pools for dopamine.
title_short Amphetamine elicits opposing actions on readily releasable and reserve pools for dopamine.
title_full Amphetamine elicits opposing actions on readily releasable and reserve pools for dopamine.
title_fullStr Amphetamine elicits opposing actions on readily releasable and reserve pools for dopamine.
title_full_unstemmed Amphetamine elicits opposing actions on readily releasable and reserve pools for dopamine.
title_sort amphetamine elicits opposing actions on readily releasable and reserve pools for dopamine.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2013-01-01
description Amphetamine, a highly addictive drug with therapeutic efficacy, exerts paradoxical effects on the fundamental communication modes employed by dopamine neurons in modulating behavior. While amphetamine elevates tonic dopamine signaling by depleting vesicular stores and driving non-exocytotic release through reverse transport, this psychostimulant also activates phasic dopamine signaling by up-regulating vesicular dopamine release. We hypothesized that these seemingly incongruent effects arise from amphetamine depleting the reserve pool and enhancing the readily releasable pool. This novel hypothesis was tested using in vivo voltammetry and stimulus trains of varying duration to access different vesicular stores. We show that amphetamine actions are stimulus dependent in the dorsal striatum. Specifically, amphetamine up-regulated vesicular dopamine release elicited by a short-duration train, which interrogates the readily releasable pool, but depleted release elicited by a long-duration train, which interrogates the reserve pool. These opposing actions of vesicular dopamine release were associated with concurrent increases in tonic and phasic dopamine responses. A link between vesicular depletion and tonic signaling was supported by results obtained for amphetamine in the ventral striatum and cocaine in both striatal sub-regions, which demonstrated augmented vesicular release and phasic signals only. We submit that amphetamine differentially targeting dopamine stores reconciles the paradoxical activation of tonic and phasic dopamine signaling. Overall, these results further highlight the unique and region-distinct cellular mechanisms of amphetamine and may have important implications for its addictive and therapeutic properties.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3643976?pdf=render
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