Abstract

Several previous reports have demonstrated that chronic administration of both directly and indirectly acting dopamine agonists produces a supersensitive behavioral response to challenge doses of dopamine agonists when compared to the responses induced by acute administration of these drugs. That is, a given dose of a dopamine agonist will produce a greater response after chronic dopamine agonist treatment than is observed upon acute administration of that dose. A similar behavioral phenomenon resulting from chronic administration of dopamine antagonists has been suggested to be due to an increase in the number of dopamine receptors present in relevant brain areas. The same hypothesis has been put forward for the hypersensitivity induced by chronic dopamine agonist administration. The present study was designed to investigate the effect of chronic administration of high doses of both direct and indirect dopamine agonists on the dopamine receptors labeled by 3H-spiroperidol. Groups of animals (CD-1 mice) were sacrificed 1, 3 and 5 days following the last chronic injection. Striatal tissue from these mice was incubated with 3H-spiroperidol and dopamine receptor binding evaluated. Affinity of the receptors for the ligand was unaltered by treatments. The receptors labeled by 3H-spiroperidol showed no significant differences in number following the chronic administration of high doses of apomorphine (30 mg/kg). The Bmax was significantly decreased at only one time period following chronic administration of dextroamphetamine (4 mg/kg); however, there was a dramatic 30% reduction in the Bmax in striatal tissue from those mice treated with N-n-propylnorapomorphine. These results suggest that the hypersensitive behavioral response in mice following chronic administration of direct and indirect acting dopamine agonists is not due to an increase in the number of dopamine receptors in the striatum which are labeled by 3H-spiroperidol.

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