Opiate reinforcement and naloxone aversion, as revealed by place preference paradigm, in two strains of rats
- 1 August 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Psychopharmacology
- Vol. 92 (4) , 473-477
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00176481
Abstract
Two strains of rats — LC2-Hi and LC2-Lo — selected for high and low self-stimulation rates, respectively, were tested for responses to opiates and to naloxone using conditioned place preference paradigm. In the two experiments which used opiates as UCS, conditioning was carried out in the non-preferred compartment while in the experiment which used naloxone, conditioning was performed in the preferred compartment. The preference changes were determined on the basis of times spent in the compartments before and after conditioning with drugs. LC2-Hi rats showed positive changes in the preference to the initially non-preferred side when morphine or heroin (5 mg/kg and 1 mg/kg, respectively) were used; no such effect was observed with LC2-Lo rats. Both lines exhibited aversive reactions to naloxone by diminishing the time spent in the environment paired with this drug, but again the response of LC2-Hi animals was significantly larger than the response of LC2-Lo rats. Chronic intake of a sweet solution (3 mM saccharin for 4 weeks) tended to amplify the aversive reaction to naloxone in both lines. It may be inferred from the present findings that there exists a common genetic factor, as revealed by the conditioned place preference paradigm, underlying positive reinforcing properties of opiates and aversive effects of naloxone.This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Influence of intake of sweet solutions on the analgesic effect of a low dose of morphine in randomly bred ratsBehavioral and Neural Biology, 1985
- Standardization Within Individuals: A Simple Method to Neutralize Individual Differences in Skin ConductancePsychophysiology, 1985
- Conditioned place preference: An evaluation of morphine's positive reinforcing propertiesPsychopharmacology, 1984
- Effects of chronically elevated intake of different concentrations of saccharin on morphine tolerance in genetically selected ratsPhysiology & Behavior, 1984
- Reinforcing properties of morphine and naloxone revealed by conditioned place preferences: a procedural examinationPsychopharmacology, 1984
- Attenuation of heroin reward in rats by disruption of the mesolimbic dopamine systemPsychopharmacology, 1983
- Saccharin preferences in prepubertal male and female rats: Relationship to self-stimulationBehavioral and Neural Biology, 1982
- Relation between eating evoked by lateral hypothalamic stimulation and tail pinch in different rat strainsBehavioral and Neural Biology, 1982
- A genetically mediated relationship between the readiness to self stimulate lateral hypothalamus and the intensity of the septal and ventromedial hypothalamic rage syndromesBrain Research, 1980
- Sex Differences in Taste Preference for Glucose and Saccharin SolutionsScience, 1967