Moy Sheryl S, Breese George R
Neurodevelopmental Disorders Research Center and Skipper Bowles Center for Alcohol Studies, Department of Psychiatry, CB# 7178, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 27599, USA.
Psychopharmacology (Berl). 2002 May;161(3):255-62. doi: 10.1007/s00213-002-1017-2. Epub 2002 Apr 5.
Disruption in brain dopamine function early in life can lead to enhanced susceptibility to the effects of NMDA receptor antagonists in adulthood, suggesting that animals given neonatal 6-OHDA treatment might provide a model for the altered NMDA receptor function associated with human disease.
The present study investigated whether neonatal dopamine lesions lead to supersensitivity to the stimulant effects of two NMDA antagonists, phencyclidine (PCP) and ketamine.
Sprague-Dawley rats, given dopamine or sham lesions on day 3 of life, were tested as adults for locomotor changes following treatment with NMDA antagonists.
Lesioned rats were more sensitive to the stimulant effects of PCP and ketamine than controls. Enhanced sensitivity to PCP emerged in the male lesioned animals following a brief priming regimen with a D(1)-dopamine receptor agonist. Sensitization was also induced by repeated treatments with PCP (5 mg/kg), given at weekly intervals across 4 weeks, with progressive increases in activity significantly enhanced in the lesioned animals. Sensitization to PCP was still evident 3 weeks following chronic PCP treatment. The high rates of PCP-induced locomotion in the lesioned animals were not attenuated by pretreatment with a dopamine antagonist selective for the D(1)-dopamine receptor site (SCH-23390, 0.3 mg/kg) or with haloperidol (0.5 mg/kg), in comparison to controls. Olanzapine (5 mg/kg), an atypical antipsychotic, significantly reduced the response to PCP (5 mg/kg) in lesioned and control animals.
This work confirms that rats with neonatal dopamine loss show enhanced sensitivity to NMDA antagonists, and may provide an animal model for the altered NMDA receptor function observed in human clinical syndromes.
生命早期脑内多巴胺功能紊乱可导致成年期对N-甲基-D-天冬氨酸(NMDA)受体拮抗剂的作用敏感性增强,这表明给予新生鼠6-羟基多巴胺(6-OHDA)处理的动物可能为与人类疾病相关的NMDA受体功能改变提供一个模型。
本研究调查新生期多巴胺损伤是否会导致对两种NMDA拮抗剂——苯环利定(PCP)和氯胺酮的兴奋作用超敏。
在出生第3天给予多巴胺损伤或假损伤的Sprague-Dawley大鼠,成年后测试其接受NMDA拮抗剂处理后的运动变化。
损伤大鼠对PCP和氯胺酮的兴奋作用比对照组更敏感。雄性损伤动物在接受D(1)-多巴胺受体激动剂的短暂启动方案后,对PCP的敏感性增强。每周间隔重复给予PCP(5mg/kg),持续4周,损伤动物的活动逐渐增加,也诱导了敏化作用。慢性PCP处理3周后,对PCP的敏化作用仍然明显。与对照组相比,损伤动物中PCP诱导的高运动率并未因用对D(1)-多巴胺受体位点有选择性的多巴胺拮抗剂(SCH-23390,0.3mg/kg)或氟哌啶醇(0.5mg/kg)预处理而减弱。非典型抗精神病药物奥氮平(5mg/kg)显著降低了损伤和对照动物对PCP(5mg/kg)的反应。
这项工作证实新生期多巴胺缺失的大鼠对NMDA拮抗剂表现出增强的敏感性,并可能为在人类临床综合征中观察到的NMDA受体功能改变提供一个动物模型。