Abstract

The effects of intraperitoneal injections of increasing doses of apomorphine, clonidine or 5-methoxy-NN-dimethyltryptamine (5-m-DMT) on approach and escape reactions induced by lateral hypothalamic (LH) or mesencephalic central gray (CG) stimulation were compared in BALB/c and DBA/2 mice. Apomorphine increased both the approach latency for LH stimulation and the escape latency for CG stimulation; the BALB/c strain was more reactive than DBA/2 animals. Clonidine reduced the approach latency for LH stimulation only in the BALB/c strain. 5-m-DMT increased escape latency both for LH and CG stimulation only in the DBA/2 strain. These results suggest that the neurochemical regulation of escape reactions respectively generated by LH or CG activation is partially different: dopamine seems to be involved only in CG aversion, whereas serotonin (5-HT) modulates both LH and CG escape reactions. Moreover, our results demonstrate a noradrenergic influence on the appetitive component of LH stimulation. Finally, they confirm that approach and escape reactions, particularly when induced from lateral hypothalamus, depend on distinct neuronal populations.

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