Abstract

Previous research has demonstrated an interaction between the effects of amphetamine and exposure to a novel environment on the activity of neurons in the nucleus accumbens. Given a model in which these accumbens efferents gate the excitability of basal forebrain cholinergic corticopetal neurons, the administration of intra-accumbens amphetamine was hypothesized to potentiate the increase in cortical acetylcholine produced by introduction to a novel environment. Dual probe microdialysis revealed no synergistic interactions between exposure to a novel environment and amphetamine on nucleus accumbens dopamine or cortical acetylcholine efflux. This finding indicates that exposure to a novel environment failed to recruit the telencephalic activation of the nucleus accumbens presumably necessary to reveal modulatory effects of accumbens dopaminergic transmission on cortical acetylcholine release.

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