AMPHETAMINE INJECTION INTO THE VENTRAL MESENCEPHALON SENSITIZES RATS TO PERIPHERAL AMPHETAMINE AND COCAINE
- 1 June 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 245 (3) , 1095-1102
Abstract
The daily administration of indirect dopamine agonists, including amphetamine and cocaine, results in a progressive increase in the behavioral stimulant effect of these drugs. Behavioral augmentation also has been shown with opioids such as morphine, and it is known that a stimulant action on dopaminergic perikarya in the ventromedial mesencephalon is critical to the development of behavioral sensitization to morphine. To determine if amphetamine-induced behavioral sensitization might also involve the mesencephalic dopamine neurons, amphetamine was microinjected daily for 2 days into regions of the rat brain containing dopamine cell bodies (A10 and A9 dopamine regions) or dopamine terminals (nucleus accumbens and striatum), and 6 days later amphetamine was given peripherally. It was found that daily amphetamine injection into the A10 or A9 dopamine region, but not into the dopamine terminal fields, significantly potentiated the motor stimulant effect of peripherally administered amphetamine. The behavioral sensitization produced by intracranial injection of amphetamine was found to be dose-dependent. Intra-A10 injection of amphetamine also was found to potentiate the motor stimulant effect of peripheral cocaine. These data indicate that an action by amphetamine in the A10 and A9 dopamine regions may play a critical role in the development of behavioral sensitization.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- REPEATED AMPHETAMINE PRETREATMENT ALTERS THE RESPONSIVENESS OF STRIATAL DOPAMINE-STIMULATED ADENYLATE-CYCLASE TO AMPHETAMINE-INDUCED DESENSITIZATION1987
- Time course of the development of the enhanced behavioral and biochemical responses to amphetamine after pretreatment with amphetamineNeuropharmacology, 1985
- Amphetamine and apomorphine responses in the rat following 6-OHDA lesions of the nucleus accumbens septi and corpus striatumBrain Research, 1975