Abstract
Cholecystokinin octapeptide (CCK-8) or cholecystokinin tetrapeptide (CCK-4) were bilaterally injected into the areas where dopamine (DA) terminals and receptors have been detected; nucleus accumbens (NA), nucleus caudatus (NC), medial profrontal cortex (MPC), or prefrontal cortex (PC). The amount injected to each animal varied from 0 (control), 1 to 500 ng of CCK-8 and 0 (saline control), 0.5 to 2.5 μg of CCK-4 in NA in a volume of 1 μl. The other areas received 500 ng CCK-8, 2.5 μg CCK-4 and proper control injections. The effects were observed in an open-field apparatus by measuring locomotor and rearing responses, the latency to move out of a specified area where the animal was first placed, and the amount of excretory bolus during a 5 min period following injections. When injected into NA, CCK-8 decreased locomotion and rearing at doses of 2.5 ng or more in a dose-related manner whereas CCK-4 increased locomotion and rearing at 1 μg or more. The effects on latency and defecation were not detected. When the peptides were injected into NC, MPC or PC no effects were detectable. It appears that the effects of CCK-8 and CCK-4 on the exploratory responses are site-specific at NA where CCK-8 and DA are found to coexist in same neurons. CCK-4, a metabolite of CCK-8, could exert a negative feedback to moderate the effect of CCK-8.
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