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Self-administration of propofol is mediated by dopamine D1 receptors in nucleus accumbens in rats.
Lian, Q; Wang, B; Zhou, W; Jin, S; Xu, L; Huang, Q; Lai, M; Lu, K; Tang, L; Zhu, H; Lin, H; Zhang, F; Cao, H; Li, J; Chen, J-F; Ge, R-S.
Afiliación
  • Lian Q; Department of Anesthesiology of the 2nd Affiliated Hospital and Institute of Neuroendocrinology, Wenzhou Medical College, Wenzhou, Zhejiang 325000, PR China.
Neuroscience ; 231: 373-83, 2013 Feb 12.
Article en En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23201252
ABSTRACT
As a widely used intravenous short-acting anesthetic, propofol is recently indicated by clinical and animal studies for its abuse potential, but the mechanism underlying propofol abuse is largely unknown. This study examined the contribution of dopamine receptor subtype (D1 and D2 receptors) and neuroanatomical locus (i.e. nuclear accumbens) in the maintenance of propofol self-administration in rats. After the acquisition and maintenance of self-administration of propofol (1.7 mg/kg/infusion) under a fixed ratio (FR1) schedule of reinforcement over 14 days, rats were treated by either intraperitoneal injection or intra-nucleus accumbens (NAc) injection of D1 receptor antagonist (SCH23390) or D2 receptor antagonists (spiperone and eticlopride) 10 min prior to the subsequent propofol self-administration. We demonstrated (i) systemic administration of SCH23390 (10, 30, 100 µg/kg, i.p.) dose-dependently decreased the rate of propofol-maintained self-administration, suggesting a critical role of the D1 receptor in mediating propofol self-administration; (ii) the blockade of the propofol self-administration by SCH23390 was specific since spiperone and eticlopride did not affect propofol self-administration and SCH23390 at these doses did not affect food-maintained responding under an FR5 schedule; (iii) intra-accumbenal injection of SCH23390 (2.5 µg/site) but not eticopride (3.0 µg/site) attenuated the propofol self-administration, localizing nuclear accumbal D1 receptors as a critical locus in the reinforcement of propofol. Together, these findings provide the first direct evidence that D1 receptors in nuclear accumbens play an important role in the maintenance of propofol self-administration.
Asunto(s)

Texto completo: 1 Base de datos: MEDLINE Asunto principal: Propofol / Receptores de Dopamina D1 / Hipnóticos y Sedantes / Núcleo Accumbens Idioma: En Revista: Neuroscience Año: 2013 Tipo del documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Base de datos: MEDLINE Asunto principal: Propofol / Receptores de Dopamina D1 / Hipnóticos y Sedantes / Núcleo Accumbens Idioma: En Revista: Neuroscience Año: 2013 Tipo del documento: Article