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Vol. 293, Issue 2, 383-389, May 2000
Departments of Emergency Medicine (E.B.B.) and Physiology and
Biophysics (S.B.A., M.S.B.), University of Illinois at Chicago, College
of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois
The coabuse of cocaine and ethanol is one of the most frequently used
substance abuse combinations in the United States. The dopamine (DA)
neurons in the ventral tegmental area (VTA) are important in the
rewarding mechanism of these two substances. Cocaine is known to block
the reuptake of DA and serotonin (5-HT). At concentrations below 1 µM, cocaine preferentially blocks the reuptake of 5-HT compared with
DA. We have previously shown that ethanol increases the firing rate of
DA neurons in the VTA, and that this excitation is enhanced by 5-HT.
Extracellular single-unit recordings were made from VTA dopaminergic
neurons in coronal brain slices from young adult Fischer 344 rats.
Cocaine (1-10 µM) reduced the spontaneous firing rate in VTA
dopaminergic neurons in a concentration-related manner. A lower
concentration of cocaine (500 nM), which is a concentration that is
pharmacologically relevant in addicts, produced only a very small
decrease in the firing rate of VTA neurons but potentiated ethanol
excitation of these neurons. Higher concentrations of cocaine (1 µM)
did not enhance ethanol excitation. Ethanol-induced excitation was
potentiated by the higher concentrations of cocaine (1 and 2 µM) in
the presence of the D2 receptor antagonist sulpiride (1 µM). Furthermore, cocaine potentiation of ethanol-induced excitation
was reversed by ketanserin (2 µM), a 5-HT2 antagonist.
The enhanced ethanol excitation of VTA dopaminergic neurons caused by
cocaine may partially explain the high incidence of the coabuse of
these two substances.
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