Abstract

Treatment of mice with lorazepam 10 mg/kg p.o. or FG 7142 40 mg/kg i.p. once a day for 14 days changed the effects of benzodiazepine (BZ) receptor ligands injected acutely on the threshold of pentylenetetrazol (PTZ)-induced seizures. The effects of the two pretreatments differed qualitatively as well as quantitatively. Lorazepam elicited a shift in the effects of all BZ receptor ligands tested, whereby the agonists lorazepam and ZK 93423 now acted like partial agonists given acutely, the partial agonist ZK 91296 acted like an antagonist and antagonists Ro 15-1788 and ZK 93426 like partial inverse agonists. The proconvulsant effects of the partial inverse agonist FG 7142 and the full inverse agonist DMCM on the PTZ-induced seizures did not change. However, FG 7142 became a full inverse agonist i.e. became convulsant, and DMCM may have increased in potency as a convulsant. After FG 7142 pretreatment lorazepan and ZK 93423 behaved like partial agonists given acutely whereas there was no change in effect for ZK 91296, Ro 15-1788 and ZK 93426. FG 7142 became convulsant (i.e. kindling occured) and the potency of DMCM as a convulsant was non-significantly increased, while their proconvulsant effects with respect to PTZ-induced seizures were not altered. The fact that the effects of the two very different pretreatments on the BZ receptor ligand continuum were in the same direction may be explainable by assuming two different mechanisms, both of which may involve the GABA receptors.

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