| Literature DB >> 23422792 |
C Bay-Richter1, M J O'Callaghan, N Mathur, C M P O'Tuathaigh, D M Heery, K C F Fone, J L Waddington, P M Moran.
Abstract
Drugs that induce psychosis, such as D-amphetamine (AMP), and those that alleviate it, such as antipsychotics, are suggested to exert behavioral effects via dopamine receptor D2 (D2). All antipsychotic drugs are D2 antagonists, but D2 antagonism underlies the severe and debilitating side effects of these drugs; it is therefore important to know whether D2 is necessary for their behavioral effects. Using D2-null mice (Drd2-/-), we first investigated whether D2 is required for AMP disruption of latent inhibition (LI). LI is a process of learning to ignore irrelevant stimuli. Disruption of LI by AMP models impaired attention and abnormal salience allocation consequent to dysregulated dopamine relevant to schizophrenia. AMP disruption of LI was seen in both wild-type (WT) and Drd2-/-. This was in contrast to AMP-induced locomotor hyperactivity, which was reduced in Drd2-/-. AMP disruption of LI was attenuated in mice lacking dopamine receptor D1 (Drd1-/-), suggesting that D1 may play a role in AMP disruption of LI. Further supporting this possibility, we found that D1 antagonist SKF83566 attenuated AMP disruption of LI in WT. Remarkably, both haloperidol and clozapine attenuated AMP disruption of LI in Drd2-/-. This demonstrates that antipsychotic drugs can attenuate AMP disruption of learning to ignore irrelevant stimuli in the absence of D2 receptors. Data suggest that D2 is not essential either for AMP to disrupt or for antipsychotic drugs to reverse AMP disruption of learning to ignore irrelevant stimuli and further that D1 merits investigation in the mediation of AMP disruption of these processes.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23422792 PMCID: PMC3682146 DOI: 10.1038/npp.2013.50
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuropsychopharmacology ISSN: 0893-133X Impact factor: 7.853
Figure 1𝒟-Amphetamine (AMP) disruption of latent inhibition (LI) is similar in wild-type (WT) and Drd−/− (a). Vehicle-treated WT (WT-Veh) and vehicle-treated Drd−/− (Drd−/−-Veh) mice show LI (higher suppression ratio (SR) in pre-exposed (PE) vs non-pre-exposed (NPE)), while 𝒟-amphetamine-treated WT (WT-AMP) and 𝒟-amphetamine-treated Drd−/− (Drd−/−-AMP) mice do not. AMP locomotor hyperactivity seen in WT is blunted in Drd−/− mice (b). *P<0.05 NPE vs PE, same genotype and drug; +P<0.05 vs vehicle same genotype for PE; and §P<0.05, §§P<0.001 vs vehicle same genotype and time bin. Drd−/−, D2-null mice.
Figure 2Haloperidol (Hal) and clozapine (Cloz) attenuate disruption of latent inhibition (LI) by 𝒟-amphetamine (AMP) in both wild-type (WT; a) and D2−/− mice (Drd−/− b); *P<0.05, **P<0.01, non-pre-exposed (NPE) vs pre-exposed (PE) same genotype and drug; +P<0.05, ++P<0.01 vs AMP-PE same genotype. Drd−/−, D2-null mice.
Figure 3𝒟-Amphetamine (AMP) disruption of latent inhibition (LI) (60 pre-exposed (PE)) is attenuated in Drd1−/− mice (a), but locomotor hyperactivity is not (b). *P<0.05 non-pre-exposed (NPE) vs PE same genotype and drug; +P<0.05 vs AMP-PE same genotype; ^P<0.05 vs WT AMP-PE; §§P<0.001 vs vehicle same genotype and time bin. Drd−/−, D1-null mice.
Figure 4𝒟-Amphetamine (AMP) reduction of latent inhibition (LI) in wild-type (WT) mice is attenuated by pretreatment with SKF83566 at 0.1 mg/kg but not 0.01 mg/kg. *P<0.05 non-pre-exposed (NPE) vs pre-exposed (PE) same drug; +P<0.05, ++P<0.01 vs AMP-PE.