Dopamine neurons make glutamatergic synapses in vitro

D Sulzer, MP Joyce, L Lin, D Geldwert… - Journal of …, 1998 - Soc Neuroscience
D Sulzer, MP Joyce, L Lin, D Geldwert, SN Haber, T Hattori, S Rayport
Journal of Neuroscience, 1998Soc Neuroscience
Interactions between dopamine and glutamate play prominent roles in memory, addiction,
and schizophrenia. Several lines of evidence have suggested that the ventral midbrain
dopamine neurons that give rise to the major CNS dopaminergic projections may also be
glutamatergic. To examine this possibility, we double immunostained ventral midbrain
sections from rat and monkey for the dopamine-synthetic enzyme tyrosine hydroxylase and
for glutamate; we found that most dopamine neurons immunostained for glutamate, both in …
Interactions between dopamine and glutamate play prominent roles in memory, addiction, and schizophrenia. Several lines of evidence have suggested that the ventral midbrain dopamine neurons that give rise to the major CNS dopaminergic projections may also be glutamatergic. To examine this possibility, we double immunostained ventral midbrain sections from rat and monkey for the dopamine-synthetic enzyme tyrosine hydroxylase and for glutamate; we found that most dopamine neurons immunostained for glutamate, both in rat and monkey. We then used postnatal cell culture to examine individual dopamine neurons. Again, most dopamine neurons immunostained for glutamate; they were also immunoreactive for phosphate-activated glutaminase, the major source of neurotransmitter glutamate. Inhibition of glutaminase reduced glutamate staining. In single-cell microculture, dopamine neurons gave rise to varicosities immunoreactive for both tyrosine hydroxylase and glutamate and others immunoreactive mainly for glutamate, which were found near the cell body. At the ultrastructural level, dopamine neurons formed occasional dopaminergic varicosities with symmetric synaptic specializations, but they more commonly formed nondopaminergic varicosities with asymmetric synaptic specializations. Stimulation of individual dopamine neurons evoked a fast glutamatergic autaptic EPSC that showed presynaptic inhibition caused by concomitant dopamine release. Thus, dopamine neurons may exert rapid synaptic actions via their glutamatergic synapses and slower modulatory actions via their dopaminergic synapses. Together with evidence for glutamate cotransmission in serotonergic raphe neurons and noradrenergic locus coeruleus neurons, the present results suggest that glutamatergic cotransmission may be the rule for central monoaminergic neurons.
Soc Neuroscience