Abstract

Male Swiss-Webster mice were used to examine the effect of NMDA on the ethanol-induced loss of the righting reflex (LORR). The LORR was used as a measure of CNS depression. Immediately after animals regained the righting reflex following ethanol injection (4.0 g/kg, IP) mice received an ICV injection of saline or NMDA (10, 50, 100, or 500 nmol/kg) in a volume of 5 microliters. Upon ICV injection of NMDA, mice again lost the righting reflex and this effect of NMDA in the presence of ethanol occurred rapidly and in a dose-dependent manner. In another experiment DL-2-amino-5-phosphonovaleric acid (APV), a competitive antagonist of NMDA, was given ICV with NMDA (50 nmol/kg) in the presence of ethanol. APV (10 and 100 nmol/kg, ICV) significantly attenuated the response of NMDA to enhance the depressant action of ethanol. When bicuculline methiodide, an antagonist of GABA, was given ICV with NMDA (50 nmol/kg), bicuculline methiodide reduced the effect of NMDA to produce a second loss of the righting reflex (return to the LORR) in the presence of ethanol. When NMDA (100 nmol/kg, ICV) was injected in the absence of ethanol into mice, NMDA by itself did not produce a loss of the righting reflex. In this investigation, the results suggest that NMDA can augment ethanol-induced depression possibly through an interaction between glutamatergic and GABAergeric systems in the CNS.

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