Unexpected potentiation by discriminant benzamide derivatives of stereotyped behaviours elicited by dopamine agonists in mice
- PMID: 4040215
- DOI: 10.1007/BF00501198
Unexpected potentiation by discriminant benzamide derivatives of stereotyped behaviours elicited by dopamine agonists in mice
Abstract
Among four stereotyped manifestations that can be simultaneously quantified in mice treated with apomorphine (APO), two of them (climbing and sniffing) emerge at low APO dosages (below 1 mg/kg) whereas licking and sniffing require APO dosages above 6 mg/kg. However, in mice pretreated (either i.p. or i.c.v.) with sulpiride (especially the levo isomer) or (+/-)amisulpride in moderate dosage stereotyped licking and sniffing are elicited by APO in much lower dosage (0.75 mg/kg). As a consequence, in mice pretreated with these benzamide derivatives and receiving 0.75 mg/kg APO, a biphasic effect was observed: licking and gnawing progressively appear at low dosages, whereas they are progressively abolished at higher dosages. This potentiation of the effects of APO by (+/-) amisulpride is even more obvious (maximal scores increased) with larger test-doses of the dopamine agonist (up to 5 mg/kg). Amisulpride also allows the emergence of the two stereotyped behaviours in mice receiving other dopamine agonists in subthreshold dosages (Dipropyl 5,6-ADTN, dexamphetamine or cocaine). The potentiation of APO is still observed after dopamine depletion by reserpine and alpha-methylparatyrosine, whereas that of dexamphetamine is abolished. In contrast with the benzamide derivatives, haloperidol does not potentiate at any dosage the effect of APO but, at 0.15 mg/kg, suppresses licking and gnawing elicited by 0.75 mg/kg APO in mice pretreated with 6.25 mg/kg amisulpride or veralipride.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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