Abstract:To test for the relative contributions of the dopaminergic and serotoninergic systems in the striatum to the effects of d-fenfluramine, an indirect serotonin receptor agonist, we assessed the expression of Fos/Jun proteins induced by d-fenfluramine given alone or in the presence of dopaminergic or serotoninergic agents. To determine the neuronal targets of d-fenfluramine in the striatum, we identified the phenotypes of striatal neurons in which d-fenfluramine induced Fos expression. Our results demonstrated that d-fenfluramine evokes nuclear expression of Fos/Jun B proteins in the striatum, and that the Fos expression was dose-dependent and accompanied by transient induction of c-fos mRNA. Fos expression was blocked by p-chloroamphetamine, a serotoninergic neurotoxin. Pretreatment with SCH 23390, a D 1 -dopamine receptor antagonist, led to a marked decrease in Fos/Jun B expression in the caudoputamen, but not in the cortex, whereas pretreatment with methiothepin, a nonselective serotonin 5-HT 1 receptor antagonist, blocked Fos expression completely in the cortex and only partially in the caudoputamen. The expression of Fos/Jun B in the striatum occurred mainly in dynorphincontaining neurons and in a subpopulation of striatal interneurons that exhibited NADPH-diaphorase activity. Most of the enkephalin-containing neurons of the striatum did not show Fos/Jun B staining. These results suggest that the mechanism by which d-fenfluramine induces c-fos and jun B expression in the rat caudoputamen depends at least in part on activation of the dopaminergic system by serotonin.
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