The effects of compounds related to ?-aminobutyrate and benzodiazepine receptors on behavioural responses to anxiogenic stimuli in the rat: Punished barpressing
- 1 February 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Psychopharmacology
- Vol. 85 (2) , 244-251
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00428424
Abstract
Rats were trained to press a bar for sucrose reward on a random-interval (RI) schedule and footshock punishment was then introduced for 3-min intrusion periods (signalled by a tone) on an independent RI schedule. Shock intensity was individually adjusted to produce stable intermediate levels of response suppression during the tone for each animal. Groups of animals were then allocated to a number of separate experiments in which they were systemically injected with anxiolytics (chlordiazepoxide HCl or sodium amylobarbitone), GABA antagonists (picrotoxin or bicuculline), the GABAA agonist muscimol, the GABAB agonist baclofen, an antagonist (RO 15-1788) at the benzodiazepine receptor and, an inverse agonist (FG 7142) at this receptor. The results showed that the alleviation of punishment-induced suppression of barpressing produced by chlordiazepoxide was blocked or partially blocked by RO 15-1788, picrotoxin and bicuculline but not by FG 7142; that picrotoxin (but not FG 7142) increased the suppression of responding by punishment; that neither muscimol nor baclofen affected responding on their own, but their combination weakly but reliably released punished responding from suppression; and that the anti-punishment effect of amylobarbitone was unaffected by either picrotoxin or bicuculline, though the barbiturate reversed the punishment-enhancing effect of picrotoxin. These results are discussed in the light of the hypothesis that anxiolytic behavioural effects are due to increased GABAergic inhibition.This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- Evidence for the involvement of brain GABA and serotonin systems in the anticonflict effects of chlordiazepoxide in ratsBehavioral and Neural Biology, 1984
- A behavioral examination of convulsant benzodiazepine and GABA antagonist, Ro 5-3663, and benzodiazepine-receptor antagonist Ro 15-1788Pharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior, 1983
- Comparison between the behavioural effects of septal and hippocampal lesions: A reviewNeuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews, 1983
- RO 15-1788 selectuvely reverses antagonism of pentylenetetrazol-induced discriminative stimuli by benzodiazepines but not by barbituratesLife Sciences, 1982
- GABA‐Benzodiazepine‐Barbiturate Receptor InteractionsJournal of Neurochemistry, 1981
- Ethyl β-carboline carboxylate lowers seizure threshold and antagonizes flurazepam-induced sedation in ratsNature, 1981
- The effects of naloxone and picrotoxin on the sedative and anticonflict effects of benzodiazepinesLife Sciences, 1978
- A programming language for on-line control of psychological experimentsBehavioral Science, 1971
- Frequency-Specific Relation between Hippocampal Theta Rhythm, Behavior, and Amobarbital ActionScience, 1970
- The effects of meprobamate, barbiturates, d-amphetamine and promazine on experimentally induced conflict in the ratPsychopharmacology, 1960