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Journal ArticleDOI

Dopaminergic regulation of cone retinomotor movement in isolated teleost retinas: I. Induction of cone contraction is mediated by D2 receptors.

Allen Dearry, +1 more
- 01 Apr 1986 - 
- Vol. 46, Iss: 4, pp 1006-1021
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TLDR
3,4‐dihydroxyphenylethylamine (dopamine) mimics the effect of light by inducing light‐adaptive retinomotor movements in cones, rods, and RPE cells by activating D2 receptors, suggesting that dopamine plays a role in both light and circadian regulation of retinmotor movements.
Abstract
In the retinas of lower vertebrates, retinal photoreceptors and melanin pigment granules of the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) undergo characteristic movements in response to changes in light intensity and to signals from an endogenous circadian clock. To identify agents responsible for mediating light and/or circadian regulation of these retinomotor movements, we investigated the effects of hormones and neurotransmitters on cone, rod, and RPE movements in the green sunfish, Lepomis cyanellus. We report here that 3,4-dihydroxyphenylethylamine (dopamine) mimics the effect of light by inducing light-adaptive retinomotor movements in all three cell types. In isolated dark-cultured retinas, dopamine induced light-adaptive cone contraction with a half-maximal effect at 10(-8) M. This effect of dopamine was inhibited by antagonists with a potency order characteristic of D2 receptor mediation. The dopamine uptake blocker benztropine also induced light-adaptive cone contraction in isolated dark-cultured retinas, suggesting that there is continuous dopamine release in the dark but that concomitant uptake normally prevents activation of cone contraction. That dopamine plays a role in light regulation of cone movement is further suggested by the observation that light-induced cone contraction was partially inhibited by sulpiride, a selective D2 dopamine antagonist, or by Co2+, a blocker of synaptic transmission. Sulpiride also promoted dark-adaptive cone elongation in isolated light-adapted retinas, suggesting that continuous dopamine action is required in the light to maintain the light-adapted cone position. Dopamine can act directly on D2 receptors located on rod and cone inner/outer segments: dopamine induced light-adaptive retinomotor movements in isolated distal fragments of dark-adapted photoreceptors cultured in the dark. Together our results indicate that dopamine induces light-adaptive retinomotor movements in cones, rods, and RPE cells by activating D2 receptors. We suggest that, in vivo, dopamine plays a role in both light and circadian regulation of retinomotor movements.

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TL;DR: It is suggested that the independently developed schemata for classification of dopamine receptors in either the central nervous and endocrine systems or the cardiovascular system are similar although maybe not completely identical.
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Light stimulates tyrosine hydroxylase activity and dopamine synthesis in retinal amacrine neurons

TL;DR: Studies of amacrine neurons should provide basic data about the biochemical processing of visual information, as well as the physiological presynaptic regulatory mechanisms of dopamine-containing neurons, in vitro with subsaturating concentration of pteridine cofactor.
Journal Article

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TL;DR: It is suggested that dopamine acts as an inhibitory retinal neurotransmitter which may mediate a neural component of retinal sensitivity control.
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Antidopaminergic properties of yohimbine.

TL;DR: It is concluded that yohimbine possesses postsynaptic dopamine receptor blocking properties in addition to its ability to inhibit alpha adrenergic receptors.
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