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Keywords Corticosteroids and nucleus ac...

Corticosteroids and nucleus accumbens

https://read.qxmd.com/read/9636221/dopamine-dependent-responses-to-morphine-depend-on-glucocorticoid-receptors
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
M Marinelli, B Aouizerate, M Barrot, M Le Moal, P V Piazza
Previous work has shown that glucocorticoid hormones facilitate the behavioral and dopaminergic effects of morphine. In this study we examined the possible role in these effects of the two central corticosteroid receptor types: mineralocorticoid receptor (MR), and glucocorticoid receptor (GR). To accomplish this, specific antagonists of these receptors were infused intracerebroventricularly and 2 hr later we measured: (i) locomotor activity induced by a systemic injection of morphine (2 mg/kg); (ii) locomotor activity induced by an infusion of morphine (1 microg per side) into the ventral tegmental area, which is a dopamine-dependent behavioral response to morphine; (iii) morphine-induced dopamine release in the nucleus accumbens, a dopaminergic projection site mediating the locomotor and reinforcing effects of drugs of abuse...
June 23, 1998: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/9259016/no-major-differences-in-locomotor-responses-to-dexamphetamine-in-high-and-low-responders-to-novelty-a-study-in-wistar-rats
#22
COMPARATIVE STUDY
M A Gingras, A R Cools
The aim of the study was to compare locomotor responses to acute and sub-chronic dexamphetamine in two distinct types of Wistar rats, namely the Nijmegen high responders to novelty (HR) and Nijmegen low responders to novelty (LR). HR and LR were chosen because they differ in neurochemical processes relevant to the control of the locomotor effects of dexamphetamine, such as the dopaminergic and adrenergic activity in the nucleus accumbens. In experiment 1, a dexamphetamine dose-response curve (0.0-2.0 mg/kg/i...
August 1997: Pharmacology, Biochemistry, and Behavior
https://read.qxmd.com/read/8986004/adrenalectomy-attenuates-nicotine-induced-dopamine-release-and-locomotor-activity-in-rats
#23
COMPARATIVE STUDY
M Shoaib, T S Shippenberg
Adrenalectomy (ADX) in mice can potentiate several physiological and behavioural responses to nicotine. The present experiments sought to examine this issue in this rat by characterising the influence of ADX upon the locomotor depressant, activating and dopamine-releasing properties of nicotine. Nicotine (0.8-1.2 mg/kg s.c.) dose-dependently depressed locomotor activity, an effect that was potentiated by ADX, while the locomotor activating effects of a smaller dose (0.4 mg/kg) were attenuated by ADX. In both SHAM and ADX rats chronically treated with nicotine for 5 days (daily injections of 0...
December 1996: Psychopharmacology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/8916071/novelty-seeking-in-rats-biobehavioral-characteristics-and-possible-relationship-with-the-sensation-seeking-trait-in-man
#24
REVIEW
F Dellu, P V Piazza, W Mayo, M Le Moal, H Simon
A behavioral trait in rats which resembles some of the features of high-sensation seekers in man has been characterized. Given that the response to novelty is the basis of the definition of sensation-seeking, individual differences in reactivity to novelty have been studied on behavioral and biological levels. Certain individuals labeled as high responders (HR) as opposed to low responders (LR) have been shown to be highly reactive when exposed to a novel environment. These groups were investigated for free-choice responses to novel environments differing in complexity and aversiveness, and to other kinds of reinforcement, i...
1996: Neuropsychobiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/8839352/modulation-of-a-novel-rna-in-brain-neurons-by-glucocorticoid-and-mineralocorticoid-receptors
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
J N Masters, S L Cotman, H H Osterburg, N R Nichols, C E Finch
A novel cDNA clone, CR16, was isolated from a rat hippocampal cDNA library and characterized for responses to corticosteroids and regional expression. The 4-kb RNA was increased 3-fold by treatment of adrenalectomized (ADX) rats with corticosterone (CORT). Overlapping cDNA totaling 4,374 nt were used to define an open reading frame of 1,356 nt beginning 191 nt from the 5'-end and encoding a 45-kD protein containing 32% proline. CR16 has no obvious homologies to GenBank or protein databases. CR16 RNA was detected by in situ hybridization in neuron-rich layers of the hippocampal formation, layers II, III and VI of the cerebral cortex, thalamus, ventromedial nucleus of the hypothalamus, bed nucleus of the stria terminalis, lateral septal nucleus, nucleus accumbens, olfactory bulb, inferior colliculus, pons and inferior olive...
January 1996: Neuroendocrinology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/8284048/modulation-of-the-locomotor-response-to-amphetamine-by-corticosterone
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
M Cador, J Dulluc, P Mormède
In the present experiments, we investigated the influence of chronic modifications of circulating levels of corticosterone on the locomotor response to amphetamine. Different groups of rats were adrenalectomized and implanted subcutaneously with pellets releasing different amounts of corticosterone (0-200 mg). A wide range of corticosterone concentrations was reached in order to saturate selectively either the type I (mineralocorticoid) or the type II (glucocorticoid) corticosteroid receptors. The locomotor response to d-amphetamine (1...
October 1993: Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/8102850/apomorphine-susceptible-and-apomorphine-unsusceptible-wistar-rats-differ-in-novelty-induced-changes-in-hippocampal-dynorphin-b-expression-and-two-way-active-avoidance-a-new-key-in-the-search-for-the-role-of-the-hippocampal-accumbens-axis
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
A R Cools, J Dierx, C Coenders, D Heeren, S Ried, B G Jenks, B Ellenbroek
The present study examines two characteristic traits of the hippocampus in apomorphine-susceptible (APO-SUS) and apomorphine-unsusceptible (APO-UNSUS) Wistar rat lines. Since hippocampal mossy fibers contain among others dynorphin B as transmitter, a radioimmunoassay was used to analyze the hippocampal dynorphin B expression in response to novelty in these lines. Dynorphin B expression at the end of the baseline condition was greater in APO-SUS rats than in APO-UNSUS rats, while exposure to novelty decreased and increased the dynorphin B expression in APO-SUS and APO-UNSUS rats, respectively...
June 30, 1993: Behavioural Brain Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/7753973/strain-differences-in-the-rewarding-and-dopamine-releasing-effects-of-morphine-in-rats
#28
COMPARATIVE STUDY
M Shoaib, R Spanagel, T Stohr, T S Shippenberg
Studies examining differential sensitivity to psychoactive drugs in mice suggest that genotype may play a critical role. Furthermore, an involvement of genotype in mediating individual differences in sensitivity to the rewarding effects of several drugs of abuse has also been postulated. The aim of this study was to examine the conditioned rewarding and dopamine-releasing effects of morphine in two outbred rat strains commonly used in addiction research. Additionally, the behavioural and neuroendocrine responses of these strains to the stress of novelty were also examined...
January 1995: Psychopharmacology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/7515507/prospective-controlled-studies-of-the-behavioral-and-biological-effects-of-exogenous-corticosteroids
#29
REVIEW
O M Wolkowitz
The brain is an important target organ for both endogenous and synthetic corticosteroid hormones, but the nature of steroid action there is complex. We review a series of studies that was designed to elucidate possible relationships between the behavioral and biological effects of exogenous corticosteroids. In these studies, corticosteroids were administered to intact animals or to currently healthy volunteers, and behavioral and biological indices of corticosteroid effects were jointly assessed. In the first study, chronic corticosterone administration to intact rats resulted in increased locomotor activity (consistent with increased caudate or nucleus accumbens dopamine activity) and increased caudate homovanillic acid (HVA) levels...
1994: Psychoneuroendocrinology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/6184641/non-opiate-beta-endorphin-fragments-and-dopamine-iv-gamma-type-endorphins-may-control-dopaminergic-systems-in-the-nucleus-accumbens
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
J M Van Ree, G Wolterink, M Fekete, D De Wied
Chronic treatment with des-enkephalin-gamma-endorphin (DE gamma E, beta-endorphin 6-17) twice daily for 10 days into the nucleus accumbens of rats resulted in hypoactivity, while similar treatment with gamma-endorphin antiserum led to a marked hyperactivity. This enhanced activity persisted for at least 3 days following discontinuation of treatment. Rats chronically treated with gamma-endorphin antiserum into the nucleus accumbens habituated at a slower rate when tested repeatedly for locomotor activity, as well as for nociception...
November 1982: Neuropharmacology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/3001772/acth1-24-effects-on-d-amphetamine-self-administration-and-the-dynamics-of-brain-dopamine-in-rats
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
A P Leccese, W H Lyness
The present experiments investigated the role of ACTH fragments in d-amphetamine self-administration in rats. Presession injections of 20 or 40 ug/80 ul ACTH1-24 (but not 10 ug/80 ul ACTH1-24 nor any dose of ACTH4-10) significantly reduced rates of d-amphetamine self-infusion for 2 days. Neurochemical experiments revealed that ACTH1-24, followed 24hr later by haloperidol, attenuated haloperidol-induced increases in HVA and DOPAC in both the caudate and nucleus accumbens. It was tentatively concluded that the corticosteroid mediated neuromodulatory action of ACTH1-24 on dopaminergic neurons might increase the rewarding quality of d-amphetamine, thus rendering control levels of self-infusion superfluous...
1985: Progress in Clinical and Biological Research
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