Abstract
Rats were trained to discriminate either caffeine or theophylline from saline using a two-lever discrimination paradigm. Since methylxanthines have been found to interfere with agonist binding at both adenosine and benzodiazepine (BDZ) receptors, chlordiazepoxide (CDP) and L-PIA (an adenosine analog) were tested for generalization to and blockade of both xanthine cues. Neither L-PIA nor CDP generalized to either xanthine cue, although both produced dose-related decreases in response rate. CDP, but not L-PIA, produced dose-related decreases in drug-lever responses when combined with training doses of caffeine or theophylline. Response rates indicated a complex interaction between the xanthines and both L-PIA and CDP. When combined with the caffeine training dose, pentobarbital also produced a dose-dependent decrease in response rate but not in drug lever choices. Finally, papaverine generalized to the caffeine cue in a dose-dependent fashion. In a second experiment, rats trained to discriminate CDP from saline showed no generalization in L-PIA tests. CDP-appropriate responding was not significantly affected when the CDP training dose was combined with caffeine. These data indicate that: (a) methylxanthine interactions with L-PIA and CDP on response rate likely involve blockade of adenosine mechanisms; (b) the xanthine cue does not appear to depend on interactions with adenosine receptors; and (c) the xanthine cue may involve effects on cyclic AMP activity and/or interaction with the BDZ/GABA receptor complex.
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