Abstract

Mice were conditioned to respond for water reinforcements on a FR-5 schedule. Taurine, injected intraperitoneally at doses of 9.0, 13.8, and 21.3 mmole/kg, 30 min prior to the experimental session, produced a dose-related decrease in both the initial response rate and total number of reinforcements received by mice deprived of water for 24 hr. The structural analogues of taurine (aminomethanesulfonic acid, 3-aminopropanesulfonic acid, β-alanine, cysteamine, and glycine) also produced a hypodipsia. Doses of taurine which produced depression of responding for water reinforcements were used which produced no suppression of spontaneous motor activity, rotarod performance, Sidman avoidance, or shuttle-box avoidance. After intraperitoneal injection, the concentration of taurine increased in the hypothalamus and medulla, but not in other brain areas. We suggest that taurine might be acting by specifically depressing areas of the hypothalamus which stimulate drinking.

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