To test the hypothesis that dopamine (DA) receptors influence cerebral DOPA-decarboxylase (DDC) activity in vivo, we used HPLC to measure the kinetics of the cerebral uptake and metabolism of [3H]DOPA in carbidopa-treated rats, and in rats also treated acutely with a DA receptor antagonist (flupenthixol, 2 mg/kg, intraperitoneally) or a DA receptor agonist (apomorphine, 200 microg/g, subcutaneously). The unidirectional blood-brain clearance of [3H]DOPA (K1DOPA, 0.030 mL g(-1) min(-1)) increased by 50% after flupenthixol. The magnitudes of the relative DDC activity (k3DOPA) in striatum (0.20 min(-1)), olfactory tubercle (0.11 min(-1)), and hypothalamus (0.15 min(-1)) of carbidopa-treated rats were doubled with flupenthixol, but cortical DDC activity was unaffected (0.02 min(-1)). Apomorphine reduced the magnitude of k3DOPA in striatum by 20%. The rate constant for catabolism of [3H]DA formed in brain (k7', monoamine oxidase [MAO] activity), which ranged from 0.025 min(-1) in striatum to 0.08 min(-1) in hypothalamus of carbidopa-treated rats, globally increased 2- to 4-fold after flupenthixol, and decreased to 0.003 min(-1) in striatum after apomorphine. These in vivo results confirm the claim that acute blockade of DA receptors with flupenthixol stimulates the synthesis of [3H]DA from [3H]DOPA, and that this [3H]DA is subject to accelerated catabolism. Conversely, activation of the DA receptors with apomorphine inhibits DDC activity and DA catabolism.