Dopamine Autoreceptors Modulate Dopamine Release from the Prefrontal Cortex

Abstract
Electrical stimulation (at 0.3, 1, or 10 Hz, 120 pulses each) produced a calcium-dependent overflow of radioactivity from slices of the rabbit prefrontal cortex preloaded with [3H]3,4-dihydroxyphenylethylamine ([3H]DA, [3H]dopamine) in the presence of desipramine. Flat frequency-release curves were observed. Apomorphine and LY-171555 inhibited in a concentration-dependent fashion the evoked overflow of DA, an effect antagonized by haloperidol. Stimulation frequencies comparable to normal firing rates of mesocortical neurons (10 Hz) drastically reduced apomorphine-induced inhibition of DA overflow. Haloperidol produced greater facilitation of DA overflow at 10 than at 1 Hz. Nomifensine, a neuronal uptake inhibitor, enhanced DA overflow. These results indicate that mesocortical DA neurons projecting to the prefrontal cortex have release modulatory autoreceptors of the D2 subtype.