Monitoring the specific activities of dopamine and its metabolites in striatum and olfactory tubercle after intravenous administration of l-[(3)H]tyrosine: Complex relations, indicating more than two compartments

Neurochem Int. 1988;12(2):203-8. doi: 10.1016/0197-0186(88)90128-3.

Abstract

It is still a matter of debate whether in dopaminergic nerve endings dopamine (DA) is present in different functional and/or metabolic compartments. To investigate this, DA metabolism was studied in vivo by measuring the specific activity of DA and its metabolites after intravenous administration of l-[3,5-(3)H]tyrosine (200 ?Ci/rat) to freely moving animals. The incorporation of (3)H into DA and metabolites was determined in striatum and olfactory tubercle at 5, 10, 20, 40, 60 and 80 min after [(3)H]tyrosine administration. In both structures the level of [(3)H]tyrosine initially declined monoexponentially, but deviated from that pattern later on. The curves representing the formation in time of [(3)H]DA and [(3)H]metabolites were very similar in both structures, although as a whole, the levels in the olfactory tubercle were higher. The relative patterns of the specific activities of DA and those of its metabolites, a possible clue to DA compartmentation, neither indicated a clearcut metabolic one-compartment, nor a two-compartment system. The flow of radioactivity through DA metabolism could in fact only be explained by assuming more complex metabolic relations.