Abstract
Administration of RDS-127 (3.0 mg/kg) induced seminal emission within three minutes of IP injection and suppressed the display of penile reflexes in intact and spinally transected rats. In Experiment 1, RDS-127 was administered to intact, sexually experienced rats in a protocol previously demonstrated to selectively lower the ejaculatory threshold of copulating animals. The incidence of seminal emission was significantly elevated by RDS-127 but penile reflexes were present in only 8% of the drug-treated rats, compared to 59% of controls. In Experiment 2, seminal emission was induced 2.3±0.4 (S.E.) minutes from injection of RDS-127. Animals which responded to RDS-127 with multiple emissions had significantly lower ejaculation latencies during copulatory tests conducted prior to drug treatment than animals which had no or only single seminal emissions following RDS-127 injection. Spontaneous seminal emission in the 3 day period initiated 2 hours after RDS-127 injection was unaffected by the drug. Spontaneously produced plugs were approximately twice the weight of those induced by RDS-127. In Experiment 3, seminal emission was induced in spinally transected rats 1.7±0.4 minutes following RDS-127 administration, whereas drug treatment attenuated the enhancement of penile reflexes observed following midthoracic spinal transection. These experiments suggest that a spinally-mediated dopaminergic mechanism is capable of stimulating seminal emission acutely in the rat and inhibiting the display of penile reflexes by the supine animal.
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