Literature DB >> 18298255

Ventral striatum dopamine D2 receptor activity inhibits rat pups' vocalization response to loss of maternal contact.

Jeff M Muller1, Holly Moore, Michael M Myers, Harry N Shair.   

Abstract

Most mammalian infants vocalize when isolated. The vocalization promotes caregiver proximity, which is critical to survival. If, before isolation, a rat pup has contact with its dam, its isolation vocalization rate is increased (maternal potentiation) relative to isolation preceded only by littermate contact. Prior work showed that systemic administration of a D2 receptor agonist blocks maternal potentiation at doses that do not alter baseline vocalization. In this study, infusion of quinpirole (2 microg/side) into the nucleus accumbens also blocks maternal potentiation. Infusion of the accumbens with the D2 antagonist raclopride (4 microg/side) prevents systemic quinpirole from blocking potentiation. Quinpirole infusion in the dorsal striatum did not affect maternal potentiation and infusion of raclopride in the dorsal striatum did not reverse the block of maternal potentiation by systemic quinpirole. Vocalization results after a second vehicle infusion on a given day are no different than the results following an initial vehicle infusion, so experimental design can not account for the effects of drug infusions. Because activity level was increased by both dorsal and ventral striatum infusions, activity level can not account for the results. Copyright (c) 2008 APA, all rights reserved.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18298255      PMCID: PMC3376754          DOI: 10.1037/0735-7044.122.1.119

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Behav Neurosci        ISSN: 0735-7044            Impact factor:   1.912


  43 in total

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8.  Brief maternal interaction increases number, amplitude, and bout size of isolation-induced ultrasonic vocalizations in infant rats (Rattus norvegicus).

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  4 in total

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2.  Dopamine's role in social modulation of infant isolation-induced vocalization: II. Maternally modulated infant separation responses are regulated by D1- and D2-family dopamine receptors.

Authors:  Jeff M Muller; Holly Moore; Michael M Myers; Harry N Shair
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3.  Dopamine's role in social modulation of infant isolation-induced vocalization: I. Reunion responses to the dam, but not littermates, are dopamine dependent.

Authors:  Harry N Shair; Jeff M Muller; Holly Moore
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4.  Salicylate-induced auditory perceptual disorders and plastic changes in nonclassical auditory centers in rats.

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  4 in total

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