Khanna J M, Morato G S, Chau A, Shah G
Department of Pharmacology, University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Brain Res Bull. 1995;37(6):599-604. doi: 10.1016/0361-9230(95)00050-o.
We recently reported that the nitric oxide (NO) synthase inhibitor L-nitroarginine (L-NA) blocks the development of rapid tolerance to the motor incoordinating effect of ethanol in the tilt-plane test. To clarify the mechanism of L-NA blockade of tolerance, four additional experiments were carried out using the same test. The first demonstrated that L-NA prevented the development of rapid tolerance to ethanol when injected prior to ethanol either on both Days 1 and 2 or only on Day 1. In the second experiment, tolerance was blocked only when L-NA was injected before but not after behavioral testing on Day 1. In the third, L-NA blocked the enhancement of rapid tolerance to ethanol induced by D-cycloserine (CS), an agonist at the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor. In the last experiment, L-NA pretreatment did not influence blood ethanol disappearance curves on Day 1, or ethanol concentrations in brain, tail blood or decapitated trunk blood on Day 2. These data argue against state-dependent learning as the basis of the L-NA effect, and confirm and extent our previous observation that NO plays a role in the development of rapid tolerance to ethanol.