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MD Pharmacology NMC syllabus ~5 min read Recent advances last updated on 2026-06-30

Dopamine Receptor Pharmacology

Dopamine receptor families (D1-like: D₁, D₅ vs D2-like: D₂, D₃, D₄) & their signalling · Synthesis, storage, reuptake (DAT) & metabolism · The four dopaminergic pathways (nigrostriatal, mesolimbic, mesocortical, tuberoinfundibular) & clinical correlates · Agonists (dopamine, fenoldopam, bromocriptine, pramipexole, ropinirole, apomorphine) & antagonists (typical/atypical antipsychotics, antiemetics) · Therapeutic uses, EPS & hyperprolactinaemia · Indian context

Past RGUHS + DNB + MPMSU · 4 DNBJun '21 RGUHSApr '06 MPMSU2006 MPMSU2003

Introduction

  • Dopamine (DA) — a catecholamine neurotransmitter (catechol + ethylamine side chain), the predominant catecholamine in the CNS and the immediate biosynthetic precursor of noradrenaline and adrenaline.
  • Five GPCR subtypes, two subfamilies — DA acts on five distinct G protein-coupled receptors — D1, D2, D3, D4, D5 — grouped on structural, signalling and pharmacological grounds into D1-like (D1, D5) and D2-like (D2, D3, D4).
  • DA does not cross the BBB — a polar molecule with no central effect when given parenterally — hence Parkinson's disease (PD) is treated with the BBB-permeant precursor l-DOPA (levodopa), not DA itself.
  • Therapeutic reach — DA-receptor drugs are central to PD, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, hyperprolactinaemia, restless leg syndrome, nausea/vomiting, and shock/heart failure — one of the highest-yield CNS topics.
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Dopamine Receptor Pharmacology

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