Sodium channel blockade unmasks two temporally distinct mechanisms of striatal dopamine release during hypoxia/hypoglycaemia in vitro

Massive striatal dopamine release during cerebral ischaemia has been implicated in the resulting neuronal damage. Sodium influx is an early event in the biochemical cascade during ischaemia and blockade of sodium channels may increase resistance to ischaemia by reducing energy demand involved in com...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neuroscience 1997-12, Vol.81 (4), p.999-1007
Hauptverfasser: Toner, C.C, Stamford, J.A
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Massive striatal dopamine release during cerebral ischaemia has been implicated in the resulting neuronal damage. Sodium influx is an early event in the biochemical cascade during ischaemia and blockade of sodium channels may increase resistance to ischaemia by reducing energy demand involved in compensation for sodium and potassium fluxes. In this study, we have determined the effects of opening and blockade of voltage-gated sodium channels on hypoxia/hypoglycaemia-induced dopamine release. Slices of rat caudate nucleus were maintained in a slice chamber superfused by an oxygenated artificial cerebrospinal fluid containing 4 mM glucose. Ischaemia (hypoxia/hypoglycaemia) was mimicked by a switch to a deoxygenated artificial cerebrospinal fluid containing 2 mM glucose and dopamine release was measured using fast cyclic voltammetry. In drug-free (control) slices, there was a 2–3 min delay after the onset of hypoxia/hypoglycaemia followed by a rapid dopamine release event which was associated with anoxic depolarization. In slices treated with the Na + channel opener, veratridine (1 μM), the time to onset of dopamine release was shortened (101±20 s, compared with 171±8 s in controls, P
ISSN:0306-4522
1873-7544
DOI:10.1016/S0306-4522(97)00259-5