Abstract

Motor activity of rats was recorded following bilateral injections of GABA and the two GABA analogues gammahydroxybutyric acid (GHBA) and baclofen into the nucleus accumbens. GABA produced a shortlasting hypoactivity and this effect was potentiated by the GABA transaminase inhibitor aminooxyacetic acid (AOAA). More pronounced hypoactivities were caused by GHBA and baclofen. The hypoactivity was followed by hyperactivity after GHBA, baclofen and, to a small extent, after AOAA plus GABA. Systemic treatment with GHBA and GABA also suppressed motor activity and GHBA caused a subsequent hyperactivity. Small doses of GABA and particularly GHBA injected into the nucleus accumbens caused an increase in motor activity without the preceding decrease, especially when the rats were habituated to the environment. The effects appeared specific since no or only small changes in motor activity were induced by carnitine and betahydroxybutyric acid, structurally related to GABA and GHBA, respectively. Furthermore, the motor activity was stimulated by local treatment with the GABA receptor blocking agent picrotoxin, but not by strychnine or pentylenetetrazole. GHBA and GABA inhibited the apomorphine-induced activity of reserpine-treated rats indicating that these compounds stimulate GABA receptors beyond the dopamine synapses. The motor activity was depressed by GHBA and GABA given into the rostral and intermediate neostriatum and into the globus pallidus and, to a smaller extent, when given into the caudal neostriatum. The stimulatory effect of GHBA or picrotoxin was less, pronounced after local application to the globus pallidus or the neostriatum than when applied to the nucleus accumbens. The increased motor activity by GHBA, baclofen and GABA might be due to stimulation of GABA autoreceptors in the nucleus accumbens. The decreased motor activity might be evoked by stimulation of postsynaptic GABA receptors in the nucleus accumbens but a similar action in the corpus striatum might contribute.

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