Abstract

Serotonin (5-HT) 1A and 1B receptors have been implicated in behavioral sensitization, but adult rats appear to develop tolerance to RU 24969 (a 5-HT1A/1B receptor agonist) rather than a sensitized response. The purpose of the present study was to determine whether a one- or four-day pretreatment regimen of RU 24969 would cause sensitization or tolerance in male and female preweanling rats. Depending on experiment, rats were pretreated with RU 24969 (0, 2.5, or 5 mg/kg) for 1 or 4 days (PD 17–20), while testing with lower or higher doses of RU 24969 occurred on PD 22. Locomotor activity, motoric capacity, and axillary temperatures were recorded. The role of Pavlovian contextual conditioning was assessed by administering RU 24969 to rats in either the home cage or a novel environment. On the first pretreatment day, RU 24969 caused both an increase in forward locomotion and motoric impairment, along with a substantial decrease in axillary temperatures. Repeated treatment with the same dose of RU 24969 caused all three dependent measures to show a tolerance response. When given a higher dose of RU 24969 on the test day, the responses lost due to repeated drug treatment were fully (locomotor activity) or partially (motoric capacity and axillary temperatures) reinstated. There was no evidence of behavioral tolerance. Results are consistent with the hypothesis that a subsensitivity of 5-HT1A/1B receptors is at least partially responsible for the tolerance caused by RU 24969, but dispositional tolerance cannot be excluded as a contributing factor.

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