The discriminative stimulus effects of dopamine D2- and D3-preferring agonists in rats.

Psychopharmacology (Berl)

Department of Psychology, University of Michigan, 1301 MSRB III, 1150 W Medical Center Dr., Ann Arbor, MI 48109, USA.

Published: April 2009

AI Article Synopsis

  • Previous research has struggled to differentiate the effects of dopamine D2- and D3-preferring agonists in drug studies, indicating that D2 receptors may play a key role in their effects.
  • The study aimed to train rats to distinguish between D2 and D3 agonists, using specific doses of pramipexole (D3-preferring) and sumanirole (D2-preferring).
  • Results showed that D2 receptor activation is mainly responsible for the effects of both agonists, while D3 activation appears to contribute little or nothing to their stimulus effects.

Article Abstract

Rationale: Previous research has found the stimulus effects of dopamine D2- and D3-preferring agonists difficult to distinguish in drug discrimination studies. Antagonism studies suggest that the stimulus effects of both types of agonists may be mediated primarily through D2 receptors.

Objectives: The current study was designed to further assess the receptors mediating the stimulus effects of these agonists and to attempt to train rats to discriminate directly between D2- and D3-preferring dopamine agonists.

Materials And Methods: Four groups of eight rats were trained to discriminate either 0.1 mg/kg of the D3-preferring agonist pramipexole from saline, 1.0 mg/kg of the D2-preferring agonist sumanirole from saline, 0.1 mg/kg pramipexole from either saline or 1.0 mg/kg sumanirole, or 1.0 mg/kg sumanirole from either saline or 0.1 mg/kg pramipexole.

Results: Three of eight rats in the 0.1 mg/kg pramipexole vs. 1.0 mg/kg sumanirole or saline failed to meet the training criteria, and the discrimination in this group was tenuous. The D2-preferring antagonist L-741,626 at 1.0 mg/kg was more effective at shifting to the right the pramipexole dose-response curve in pramipexole-trained rats, while 32 mg/kg of the selective D3 antagonist PG01037 had little effect. Quinpirole and 7-OH-DPAT fully or partially substituted for both pramipexole and sumanirole in each group tested, while cocaine did not substitute in any group.

Conclusions: Antagonist data along with the pattern of training and substitution data suggested that D2 receptor activation is primarily responsible for the stimulus effects of both sumanirole and pramipexole with D3 receptor activation playing little or no role.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3065021PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00213-008-1323-4DOI Listing

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