Abstract

The ability of Ro15-4513, an imidazobenzodiazepine inverse benzodiazepine agonist, to attenuate/block the acquisition of an ethanol (ETOH)-induced conditioned taste aversion (CTA) was investigated in two experiments. Experiment 1 examined the effects of Ro15-4513 (3 mg/kg) on rats' consumption of a novel saccharin solution under a traditional CTA paradigm. Experiment 2 examined the effects of Ro15-4513 (3 mg/kg) on rats' consumption of a novel saccharin solution under a preexposure CTA paradigm. Under the preexposure paradigm, rats were given Ro15-4513 immediately before each of five daily consecutive preexposure treatments prior to the initial conditioning day. To obtain maximal preexposure and unconditioned stimulus effects, a 2-g/kg dose of ETOH (20% v/v) was used in the present study. As previously reported, animals given ETOH following 20-min access to a novel saccharin solution established moderate to strong aversions, with the degree of aversion being directly related to the number of conditioning days. Experiment 1 showed that Ro15-4513 failed to alter the CTA induced by ETOH. Experiment 2 further showed that Ro15-4513 failed to block the preexposure effect exerted on the ETOH-mediated CTA. The results confirm previous reports regarding the failure of Ro15-4513 to disrupt an ETOH-induced CTA. These data are in agreement with a number of behavioral studies demonstrating the failure of Ro15-4513 to antagonize certain actions of ETOH. Moreover, the present study along with a previous report suggests that ETOH-induced CTA's do not appear to be mediated via actions at the GABA-BDZ receptor complex.

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