Neonatal co-lesion by DSP-4 and 5,7-DHT produces adulthood behavioral sensitization to dopamine D2 receptor agonists

2009 
Abstract To assess the possible modulatory effects of noradrenergic and serotoninergic neurons on dopaminergic neuronal activity, the noradrenergic and serotoninergic neurotoxins DSP-4 N-(2-chlorethyl)-N-ethyl-2-bromobenzylamine (50.0 mg/kg, sc ) and 5,7-dihydroxytryptamine (5,7-DHT) (37.5 μg icv , half in each lateral ventricle), respectively, were administered toWistar rats on the first and third days of postnatal ontogeny, and dopamine (DA) agonist-induced behaviors were assessed in adulthood. At eight weeks, using an HPLC/ED technique, DSP-4 treatment was associated with a reduction in NE content of the corpus striatum (> 60%), hippocampus (95%), and frontal cortex (> 85%), while 5,7-DHT was associated with an 80–90% serotonin reduction in the same brain regions. DA content was unaltered in the striatum and the cortex. In the group lesioned with both DSP-4 and 5,7-DHT, quinpirole-induced (DA D 2 agonist) yawning, 7-hydroxy-DPAT-induced (DA D 3 agonist) yawning, and apomorphine-induced (non-selective DAagonist) stereotypies were enhanced. However, SKF 38393-induced (DA D 1 agonist) oral activity was reduced in the DSP-4 + 5,7-DHT group. These findings demonstrate that DA D 2 -and D 3 -agonist-induced behaviors are enhanced while DA D 1 -agonist-induced behaviors are suppressed in adult rats in which brain noradrenergic and serotoninergic innervation of the brain has largely been destroyed. This study indicates that noradrenergic and serotoninergic neurons have a great impact on the development of DA receptor reactivity (sensitivity).
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