Fernandez-Tome M P, Sanchez-Blazquez P, del Rio J
Psychopharmacology (Berl). 1979 Mar 14;61(1):43-7. doi: 10.1007/BF00426809.
Pretraining administration of the dopaminergic stimulant apomorphine (0.25--16 mg/kg) impaired retention performance of mice on a one-trial passive avoidance task. Only with a very high dose (16 mg/kg) of this drug did the effect seem related to an interference with memory formation processes. Of the dopamine receptor-blocking agents used, haloperidol (0.125--1 mg/kg), but not chlorpromazine or clozapine (0.25--4 mg/kg), prevented the apomorphine effect. Phenoxybenzamine (8 mg/kg), a noradrenaline receptor-blocker, antagonized the haloperidol effect and, when combined with a subeffective dose of apomorphine, impaired passive avoidance learning. The results obtained are interpreted in terms of the proposed inhibitory actions exerted by central noradrenaline on dopamine systems of the brain.