Abstract

Pretreatment with psychostimulant drugs causes sensitisation of their effects on locomotor activity and dopamine (DA) overflow in the nucleus accumbens (NAcc) and there is evidence for similarities in the mechanisms involved. This study used in vivo microdialysis in conscious freely moving rats to investigate the extent to which pretreatment with nicotine causes sensitisation to D-amphetamine. Pretreatment with nicotine (0.4 mg/kg s.c. daily for 5 days) caused sensitisation of the locomotor responses to D-amphetamine (0.1-0.5 mg/kg s.c.) but not cocaine (15 mg/kg i.p.). Nicotine pretreatment did not influence the increase in DA overflow into dialysis probes, located in the core of the NAcc, evoked by systemic injections of D-amphetamine or cocaine (15 mg/kg i.p.) but decreased the overflow evoked by the administration of D-amphetamine (1 x 10(-6) M) through the dialysis probe. The results provide further evidence for a dissociation between the expression of sensitised locomotor responses to psychostimulant drugs and sensitisation of their stimulatory effects on DA overflow in the core of the NAcc. The results suggest that the sensitisation of the effects of nicotine on DA overflow in this subdivision of the NAcc may be pharmacologically specific to nicotinic drugs.

Full Text
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