Activity of dorsal raphe neurons is controlled by noradrenaline afferents. In this brain region, noradrenaline activates Ga qcoupled a1-adrenergic receptors (a1-A R ), causing action potential (AP) firing and serotonin release. In vitro, electrical stimulation elicits vesicular noradrenaline release and subsequent activation of a1-A R to produce an EPSC (a1-A R -EPSC). The duration of the a1-A R -EPSC (;27 s) is much longer than that of most other synaptic currents, but the factors that govern the spatiotemporal dynamics of a1-A R are poorly understood. Using an acute brain slice preparation from adult male and female mice and electrophysiological recordings from dorsal raphe neurons, we found that the time course of the a1-A R -EPSC was slow, but highly consistent within individual serotonin neurons. The amount of noradrenaline released influenced the amplitude of the a1-A R -EPSC without altering the time constant of decay suggesting that once released, extracellular noradrenaline was cleared efficiently. Reuptake of noradrenaline via noradrenaline transporters was a primary means of terminating the a1-A R -EPSC, with little evidence for extrasynaptic diffusion of noradrenaline unless transporter-dependent reuptake was impaired. Taken together, the results demonstrate that despite slow intrinsic signaling kinetics, noradrenalinedependent synaptic transmission in the dorsal raphe is temporally and spatially controlled and noradrenaline transporters are critical regulators of serotonin neuron excitability. Given the functionally distinct types of neurons intermingled in the dorsal raphe nucleus and the unique roles of these neural circuits in physiological responses, transporters may preserve independence of each synapse to encode a long-lasting but discrete signal.
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