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Pharmacol Biochem Behav 1999 Jan;62(1):21-9

Behavioral effects of dopamine agonists and antagonists: influence of
estrous cycle, ovariectomy, and estrogen replacement in rats.

Diaz-Veliz G, Benavides MS, Butron S, Dussaubat N, Mora S
Programa de Farmacologia Molecular y Clinica, Instituto de Ciencias
Biomedicas, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de Chile, Santiago, Chile.

The influence of the hormonal condition on the reactivity of central
dopamine (DA) receptors was studied in male and in intact and ovariectomized
(OVX) female rats. They were injected with selective DA agonists, acting
either on D1 (SKF 38393, 2.5 or 10 mg/kg) or D2 receptors (PPHT, 31.3 or 125
microg/kg), or with selective DA antagonists, acting either on D1 (SCH
23390, 6.25 or 25 microg/kg), or D2 receptors (sulpiride, 10 or 40 mg/kg).
The acquisition of an avoidance conditioning response (CAR) and the
performance of some spontaneous motor behaviors were tested. Both D1 and D2
agonists and antagonists impaired the acquisition of CARs in diestrous, OVX,
and male rats. Nevertheless, the effects of these drugs during estrus and in
estradiol-primed OVX rats were different according to the drug and the dose
injected. Whereas SKF 38393 failed to induce significative changes, PPHT and
low doses of SCH 23390 and sulpiride improved the acquisition of CARS in
those groups. The effects on conditioning were not accompanied with
equivalent changes in spontaneous motor activity. Estradiol level
fluctuations that occur in female rats within the estrous cycle or in OVX
rats primed with estradiol would be responsive of changes in the response to
DA agents. Although the reactivity of central DA systems is differentially
affected by the hormonal condition of the rat, the precise mechanism of this
modulatory action remains unknown.

PMID: 9972841, UI: 99137126
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