1. Academic Validation
  2. SKF-83566, a D1-dopamine receptor antagonist, inhibits the dopamine transporter

SKF-83566, a D1-dopamine receptor antagonist, inhibits the dopamine transporter

  • J Neurochem. 2011 Sep;118(5):714-20. doi: 10.1111/j.1471-4159.2011.07357.x.
Melissa A Stouffer 1 Solav Ali Maarten E A Reith Jyoti C Patel Federica Sarti Kenneth D Carr Margaret E Rice
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Physiology and Neuroscience, New York University School of Medicine, New York, New York 10016, USA.
Abstract

Dopamine (DA) is an important transmitter in both motor and limbic pathways. We sought to investigate the role of D(1)-receptor activation in axonal DA release regulation in dorsal striatum using a D(1)-receptor antagonist, SKF-83566. Evoked DA release was monitored in rat striatal slices using fast-scan cyclic voltammetry. SKF-83566 caused a concentration-dependent increase in peak single-pulse evoked extracellular DA concentration, with a maximum increase of ∼ 65% in 5 μM SKF-83566. This was accompanied by a concentration-dependent increase in extracellular DA concentration clearance time. Both effects were occluded by nomifensine (1 μM), a Dopamine Transporter (DAT) inhibitor, suggesting that SKF-83566 acted via the DAT. We tested this by examining [(3)H]DA uptake into LLc-PK cells expressing rat DAT, and confirmed that SKF-83566 is a competitive DAT inhibitor with an IC(50) of 5.7 μM. Binding studies with [(3)H]CFT, a cocaine analog, showed even more potent action of SKF-83566 at the DAT cocaine binding site (IC(50) = 0.51 μM). Thus, data obtained using SKF-83566 as a D(1) DA-receptor antagonist may be confounded by concurrent DAT inhibition. More positively, however, SKF-83566 might be a candidate to attenuate cocaine effects in vivo because of the greater potency of this drug at the cocaine versus DA binding site of the DAT.

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