Abstract

A comparison was made in the behavioral responses of spontaneously hypertensive (SHR) and Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) normotensive rats to d-amphetamine. Animals were tested at a young age (6 weeks) to minimize the effects of elevated blood pressure on drug responsiveness. SHR rats were more active than WKY rats after injections of 1.0, 2.0, and 4.0 mg/kg d-amphetamine. A significant strain difference in stereotypy was also noted; rearing occurred in SHR rats while lateral or vertical head movements (head waving) occurred in WKY rats. The lack of significant strain differences in the behavioral responses of rats to apomorphine, a direct acting dopamine agonist, suggested that the differential behavioral responses to d-amphetamine were not a result of differences between strains in receptor sensitivity. Pretreatment of rats with reserpine eliminated the strain differences in behavioral responses to d-amphetamine. Pretreatment of rats with alpha-methyl-p-tyrosine prior to administration of d-amphetamine eliminated the strain differences in stereotyped behavior; however, WKY rats remained less active than SHR rats. Pretreatment of SHR rats with parachlorophenylalanine had no effect on the behavioral responses to d-amphetamine. In contrast, pretreatment of WKY rats with parachlorophenylalanine resulted in an increase in rearing and a decrease in head waving following an injection of d-amphetamine. These findings suggest that the differences in responses to d-amphetamine of SHR and WKY rats are due in part to variations in the activities of central catecholaminergic and serotonergic neurons.

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