Abstract
When the benzodiazepine inverse agonist DMCM (6,7-dimethoxy-4-ethyl-beta-carboline-3-carboxylic acid methyl ester) occupies the benzodiazepine recognition site on the GABAA receptor complex, the inhibitory action of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) is attenuated. DMCM acted as an unconditional stimulus for one response associated with fear or anxiety, analgesia, as indicated by a dose-dependent (0.25-1.0 mg/kg) suppression of rats' responses to a formalin injection. This was accompanied by other fearlike responses (defecation and urination). The opioid antagonist naltrexone (1.75-14 mg/kg) did not affect these behaviors. Environmental cues associated with DMCM provoked analgesia and defecation in the absence of the drug. The conditional analgesia was reversed by naltrexone (7 mg/kg). DMCM functions as an unconditional fear stimulus by eliciting fear-related behaviors and conditioning those responses to neutral stimuli. The neural circuitry underlying fear conditioning appears to involve tonically inhibitory GABAergic synapses.

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