Abstract

In two experiments, using different drug doses and periods of drug administration, rats were given amphetamine (AMPH) either continuously (via slow-release pellets), or intermittently (via injections). In both experiments, only the rats pretreated with intermittent AMPH subsequently showed heightened responsivity to the selective D-2 dopamine agonist LY171555 but not to SKF38393 (a D-1 agonist). This altered response to LY171555 was still present 30 days after the AMPH withdrawal, implying that D-2 dopamine receptors at least partially mediate AMPH inverse tolerance effects. The behavioral response to the D-2 agonist was clearly different in animals receiving high versus low doses of AMPH, suggesting that different drug-state learning may have occurred during pretreatment. In a third experiment, in which rats were given repeated daily injections of either the D-1 or the D-2 agonist, only rats pretreated with the D-2 agonist and subsequently injected with the D-2 agonist clearly showed heightened responsivity. These data imply an important role of D-2 receptors in the AMPH inverse tolerance effect.

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