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1.
The effects of Ro 15-1788 and ethyl-beta-carboline-3-carboxylate (beta-CCE) were studied alone and in combination on the behavioral performances of squirrel monkeys. Under one procedure, performances maintained by food were suppressed by electric shock presentation (punishment or "conflict" procedure). Under a second procedure, responding was maintained either by food or electric shock delivery under a 5-min fixed-interval schedule. Doses of beta-CCE between 0.1 and 3.0 mg/kg, i.m., produced graded decreases in punished responding which were reversed by pretreatment with Ro 15-1788 (1.0 - 10.0 mg/kg, i.m.). Low doses of beta-CCE (0.03 - 0.3 mg/kg, i.m.) increased responding of monkeys maintained by shock presentation, but did not affect food-maintained responding; higher doses of beta-CCE decreased responding under both schedules. These effects of beta-CCE are opposite those produced by the benzodiazepines under this procedure. Ro 15-1788 (1.0 mg/kg i.m.) antagonized the effects of beta-CCE, producing a shift to the right in the dose-response curves. These findings provide further support for the view that beta-CCE and Ro 15-1788 produce effects mediated by the same benzodiazepine receptor recognition site.  相似文献   

2.
Five pigeons were trained to discriminate IM injections of oxazepam (4.0 mg/kg) from vehicle with responding maintained under a fixed-ratio 30 schedule of food delivery. Under test conditions, responding increased in a dose-dependent manner in all pigeons after the administration of other benzodiazepines including diazepam (0.01-1.0 mg/kg), temazepam (0.01-3.0 mg/kg), halazepam (0.1-56.0 mg/kg), and midazolam (0.1-1.0 mg/kg) as well as the barbiturate pentobarbital (2.0-8.0 mg/kg) and the non-benzodiazepine anxiolytic CL 218,872 (1.0-8.0 mg/kg). At the higher doses of each of these compounds, over 80% of responding occurred on the oxazepam-appropriate key. Cocaine (0.5-4.0 mg/kg), bupropion (3.0-56.0 mg/kg) and nortriptyline (3.0-56.0 mg/kg) failed to substitute for oxazepam even at doses that decreased rates of responding. The discriminative stimulus (DS) effects of the lowest doses of oxazepam and CL 218,872 that produced 100% drug-appropriate responding were blocked by the benzodiazepine antagonist Ro 15-1788. This antagonism was reversed by increasing the dose of the agonists. The DS effects of diazepam were antagonized partially by Ro 15-1788 (3 of 5 pigeons), and the antagonism was reversed by higher doses of diazepam in two of these pigeons. The DS effects of pentobarbital were antagonized by Ro 15-1788 in 2 of 5 pigeons, but the blockade was not reversed by higher pentobarbital doses.  相似文献   

3.
Effects of pentobarbital, chlordiazepoxide and ethanol were studied alone and in combination with thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH), IM, on punished behavior. Key-peck responses of pigeons were maintained by food presentation under a fixed-interval 3-min schedule in which every 30th response produced shock. Moderate doses of pentobarbital, chlordiazepoxide and ethanol increased punished responding to 150-200% of control values while the higher doses of these drugs almost completely eliminated responding. TRH (0.01-1 mg/kg) had little effect on punished responding and 3 mg/kg produced 50% decreases. Although the lower doses of TRH were without effect when given alone, doses of 0.03 mg/kg and greater markedly potentiated the rate-increasing effects of pentobarbital, chlordiazepoxide and ethanol. Increases in punished responding of 350% were obtained with combinations of TRH and these drugs. The rate-decreasing effects of the sedative-hypnotic and anxiolytic compounds were not reversed by TRH. Potentiation of the behavioral effects of sedative-hypnotic and anxiolytic drugs by TRH suggests that TRH may play an important role in modulating the behavioral effects of these compounds and that combinations of neuroactive peptides with certain psychotherapeutic agents may be of some therapeutic value.  相似文献   

4.
Rhesus monkeys were trained to discriminate injections of saline from those of beta-carboline-3-carboxylic acid ethyl ester (beta-CCE), a compound that binds to the benzodiazepine receptor, but often has actions opposite to those of the benzodiazepines. A benzodiazepine agonist midazolam and low doses of a specific benzodiazepine antagonist, Ro 15-1788, reversed the discriminative effects of beta-CCE. Higher doses of Ro 15-1788 produced stimulus effects similar to beta-CCE. In a separate experiment, monkeys responded to terminate intravenous infusions of beta-CCE, but not midazolam. This aversive effect of beta-CCE was reversed by Ro 15-1788. The behavioral effects of beta-CCE in these non-human primates are consistent with other data that have shown it to act on benzodiazepine receptors, and support the hypothesis that beta-CCE can be considered an inverse agonist at this receptor.  相似文献   

5.
The benzodiazepine antagonist properties of Ro 15-1788 were evaluated in rats trained to discriminate between saline and either 1.0 mg/kg of diazepam or 10 mg/kg of pentobarbital in a two-choice discrete-trial shock avoidance procedure. When administered alone, 1.0 mg/kg of diazepam and 10 mg/kg of pentobarbital produced comparable amounts of drug-appropriate responding (> 84%), whether rats were trained to discriminate between diazepam or pentobarbital and saline. Ro 15-1788 (3–32 mg/kg, p.o.), administered 10 min before diazepam or pentobarbital, produced a dose-related blockade of the discriminative effects of diazepam in both groups of rats, but was completely ineffective in blocking the discriminative effects of pentobarbital. The dose-effect curve for the discriminative effects of diazepam was shifted to the right in a parallel fashion 3- and 13-fold by 10 and 32 mg/kg of Ro 15-1788, respectively, indicating that Ro 15-1788 acts as a surmountable, competitive antagonist of diazepam. When administered alone, Ro 15-1788 (32–100 mg/kg, p.o.) produced primarily saline-appropriate responding, although 100 mg/kg of Ro 15-1788 produced drug-appropriate responding in one out of eight rats. When administered orally 30 min after diazepam, Ro 15-1788 (32 mg/kg) completely reversed within 10 min the discriminative effects of diazepam. The blockade of diazepam's discriminative effects by 32 mg/kg of Ro 15-1788 appeared to last at least as long (approximately 2 hr) as the effects of diazepam alone.  相似文献   

6.
The discriminative effects of cyclorphan were studied in pigeons trained to discriminate 0.32 mg/kg ethylketazocine, 1.8 mg/kg cyclazocine, or 32 mg/kg naltrexone from saline. A fourth group of pigeons was administered 100 mg/kg/day morphine and trained to discriminate 0.1 mg/kg naltrexone from saline. Cyclorphan produced dose-related ethylketazocine-appropriate responding that reached a maximum of 83% of the total session responses at 0.3 mg/kg. Higher cyclorphan doses produced less ethylketazocine-appropriate responding. In pigeons trained to discriminate cyclazocine from saline, maximum drug-appropriate responding of greater than 90% occured at 5.6–10.0 mg/kg cyclorphan. In narcotic-naive pigeons trained to discriminate 32 mg/kg naltrexone from saline, cyclorphan produced a maximum of less than 50% drug-appropriate responding. In contrast, in pigeons chronically administered morphine and trained to discriminate 0.1 mg/kg naltrexone from saline, 1.0 mg/kg cyclorphan resulted in 100% drug-appropriate responding. In pigeons responding under a multiple fixed-interval, fixed-ratio schedule of food delivery, cyclorphan produced a complete dose-related reversal of the rate-decreasing effects of 10 mg/kg morphine, the maximally effective antagonist doses being 1.0–3.2 mg/kg. Higher cyclorphan doses (10 mg/kg) resulted in response rate decreases that were not reversed by naloxone (1 mg/kg). Thus, cyclorphan has discriminative effects that are similar to those of both ethylketazocine and, at 20-fold higher doses, cyclazocine. In addition, in morphine-treated pigeons, cyclorphan, across the same range of doses that produce ethylketazocine-appropriate responding, has discriminative effects that are similar to those of naltrexone, an effect that is probably related to the antagonist action of the drug.  相似文献   

7.
The effects of benzodiazepine antagonist Ro 15–1788, alone or with diazepam, were studied in mice on convulsions induced by pentylenetetrazol (PTZ). We found that Ro 15–1788 (1 mg/kg) was able to antagonize the anticonvulsive effects of diazepam (1 mg/kg), but also had, with submaximal doses of PTZ (65 mg/kg), its own anti-convulsive action. At very low doses (0.1 mg/kg), it even potentiated the anticonvulsive effects of diazepam (0.05 mg/kg). This dual action provides evidence for partial agonist properties of the antagonist Ro 15–1788.  相似文献   

8.
H E Shannon  F Guzman  J M Cook 《Life sciences》1984,35(22):2227-2236
The effectiveness of beta-carboline-3-carboxylate-t-butyl ester (beta CCtB) in antagonizing the anticonvulsant, ataxic and antipunishment effects of diazepam were evaluated. In mice, beta CCtB at doses of 3 and 10 mg/kg produced a dose-related antagonism of the anticonvulsant effects of diazepam against pentylenetetrazole (80 mg/kg). A dose of 30 mg/kg of beta CCtB did not produce a further shift in the diazepam dose-effect curve, apparently because beta CCtB failed to block the muscle-relaxant effects of diazepam. Further, beta CCtB (30 mg/kg) failed to antagonize the ataxic effects of diazepam in an inverted screen test. Rats responded under a multiple schedule where in one component every twentieth response (FR20) resulted in water presentation (unpunished component) and in another component every twentieth response (FR20) resulted in both shock and water presentation (punished component). Diazepam p.o. (0.1 to 10 mg/kg) first increased and then decreased rates in the punished component but only decreased rates in the unpunished component. beta CCtB had no effect on response rates when administered alone, but antagonized the rate-increasing effects of diazepam in the punished component. beta CCtB did not alter the rate-decreasing effects of diazepam in either component. Thus, beta CCtB selectively antagonized the effects of diazepam on punished behavior as well as the anticonvulsant effects of diazepam, but beta CCtB failed to antagonize the rate-decreasing and ataxic effects of diazepam. These results are consistent with the interpretation that beta CCtB is a selective BZ1 benzodiazepine receptor antagonist.  相似文献   

9.
Twenty male Sprague-Dawley rats were trained to discriminate 3.0 mg/kg delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) from its vehicle. Following acquisition of this discrimination animals were tested for generalization to 3.0 mg/kg diazepam. Thirteen animals showed a generalization from THC to diazepam, whereas the remaining seven animals did not. The generalization curve for diazepam was dose-dependent from 0.1 to 10.0 mg/kg in the first group; the latter group showed no generalization from THC at any dose of diazepam in this range. No differences were found between these groups in the generalization curve for THC. The benzodiazepine antagonist Ro 15-1788 (2.0 mg/kg) antagonized the generalization to diazepam in the group that discriminated diazepam as THC. In contrast, Ro 15-1788 increased THC lever responding of 10 mg/kg diazepam in the group which did not generalize from THC. Ro 15-1788 did not alter the discriminability of THC in either group. THC also showed partial generalization to pentobarbital (1 to 10 mg/kg). The generalization was again complete in one subgroup and absent in another, but there was only a 43 percent overlap between the subgroups found with testing for generalization to diazepam. The percent THC lever responding with 3.0 mg/kg pentobarbital was increased by Ro 15-1788 in the group which generalized to diazepam, but not the other group. These data suggest that the discriminative stimulus properties of THC may have some commonality with the effects of diazepam in a subpopulation of rats trained to discriminate THC. These THC-like effects of diazepam are probably mediated by benzodiazepine receptors since they are antagonized by a specific benzodiazepine receptor antagonist.  相似文献   

10.
Lever-pressing of squirrel monkeys was maintained under a multiple fixed-interval (FI) 5-min schedule of food presentation. In one component, responding was suppressed to various degrees by the presentation of electric shock following each 30th response. When responding was either substantially or minimally suppressed, intermediate doses of chlordiazepoxide (CDAP, 1-30 mg/kg) increased both suppressed and non-suppressed responding. Beta-carboline 3-carboxylic acid ethyl ester (beta-CCE, 0.1-3 mg/kg) had little effect at low to intermediate doses (0.1-0.3 mg/kg) and decreased both minimally-suppressed and non-suppressed responding to a comparable extent at higher doses. Repeated daily dosing with beta-CCE (up to 10 mg/kg) resulted in rapid tolerance to its rate-decreasing effects. As agonists do not typically exhibit rapid tolerance for anxiolytic efficacy, the current results suggest that some behavioral effects of inverse agonists may not be strictly opposite those of benzodiazepines.  相似文献   

11.
The effects of the benzodiazepine receptor antagonist, Ro 15-1788, were examined on analgesia induced by morphine after central (intracerebroventricular, i.c.v., or intrathecal, i.t.) and systemic administration. Analgesia was assessed in squirrel monkeys trained to respond under an electric shock tiltration procedure and in mice using the radiant heat tail-flick test. Central and systemic administration of morphine produced antinociceptive effects that were antagonized by 0.1 mg/kg of naloxone in both species. Ro 15-1788 antagonized the effects of morphine after central (i.c.v. or i.t.) administration but did not alter the effects of morphine given by the systemic route. This novel interaction suggests that Ro 15-1788 may be useful in pharmacologically separating neural substrates subserving opiate analgesia.  相似文献   

12.
The effects of various doses of diazepam and the new central benzodiazepine antagonist Ro-15-1788 were investigated in fully amygdaloid kindled rats. Diazepam had a pronounced dose-dependent anticonvulsant effect in this model. Ro-15-1788 dose-dependently reduced the behavioral ranks of the elicited kindled seizures to a maximum of 60% of control without consistently modifying the afterdischarge duration. No prestimulation convulsant effects were seen with Ro-15-1788. When 2 mg/kg i.p. of Ro-15-1788 was given after various doses of diazepam, the prestimulation sedation and ataxia anticonvulsant effects of diazepam (0.5-2.0 mg/kg) were attenuated by treatment with 2 mg/kg dose of Ro-15-1788. At the low dose of diazepam (0.25 mg/kg), increased reduction of behavioral rank and after discharge duration was seen after the 2 mg/kg dose of Ro-15-1788. Thus, Ro-15-1788 appears not to have proconvulsant properties in the kindled amygdaloid seizure model. Further, Ro-15-1788 appears to have some anticonvulsant properties of its own. Mixed agonist and antagonist effects were seen with Ro-15-1788 when given after various doses of diazepam in this model.  相似文献   

13.
The effects of two drugs acting at the peripheral type benzodiazepine binding sites, PK 11195 and RO5-4864, were examined in shock-induced suppression of drinking in rats. These two compounds have opposite effects : RO5-4864 (3.1-1205 mg/kg i.p.) enhanced whereas PK 11195 (25-50 mg/kg i.p.) decreased the punished responding, and PK 11195 (6.25 mg/kg, a dose which did not alter the punished responding) blocked the proconflict action of RO5-4864 (6.25 and 12.5 mg/kg). The effects of RO5-4864 and PK 11195 were not antagonized by RO15-1788, a selective antagonist of the central benzodiazepine site. In addition, PK 11195 (6.25 mg/kg) did not reverse the proconflict effect of two beta-carbolines : beta-CEE and FG 7142. AS picrotoxin did not change the punished responding, these data imply that the effects of RO5-4864 and PK 11195 on the one hand and those of chlordiazepoxide and beta-carbolines on the other hand are differentially mediated and suggest that the peripheral type benzodiazepine binding sites are involved in this conflict model.  相似文献   

14.
The imidazobenzodiazepine Ro 15-4513 antagonizes methoxyflurane anesthesia   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
E J Moody  P Skolnick 《Life sciences》1988,43(16):1269-1276
Parenteral administration of the imidazobenzodiazepine Ro 15-4513 (a high affinity ligand of the benzodiazepine receptor with partial inverse agonist qualities) produced a dose dependent reduction in sleep time of mice exposed to the inhalation anesthetic, methoxyflurane. The reductions in methoxyflurane sleep time ranged from approximately 20% at 4 mg/kg to approximately 38% at 32 mg/kg of Ro 15-4513. Co-administration of the benzodiazepine receptor antagonist Ro 15-1788 (16 mg/kg) or the inverse agonists DMCM (5-20 mg/kg) and FG 7142 (22.5 mg/kg) blocks this effect which suggests that the reductions in methoxyflurane sleep time produced by Ro 15-4513 are mediated via occupation of benzodiazepine receptors. Moreover, neither DMCM (5-20 mg/kg) nor FG 7142 (22.5 mg/kg) reduced methoxyflurane sleep time which suggests this effect of Ro 15-4513 cannot be attributed solely to its partial inverse agonist properties. These observations support recent findings that inhalation anesthetics may produce their depressant effects via perturbation of the benzodiazepine/GABA receptor chloride channel complex, and suggest that Ro 15-4513 may serve as a prototype of agents capable of antagonizing the depressant effects of inhalation anesthetics such as methoxyflurane.  相似文献   

15.
R L Garrett  W M Bourn 《Life sciences》1985,37(20):1933-1939
The convulsant influence of high doses of diazepam, in the presence of the benzodiazepine receptor antagonist Ro 15-1788, was studied in rats. Animals were implanted with permanent cortical screw electrodes for EEG recording. EEG spiking and accompanying clonic activity was observed in rats receiving greater than or equal to 200 mg/kg diazepam, followed 10 minutes later by Ro 15-1788 (20 mg/kg). Pentylenetetrazole and picrotoxin seizure thresholds, measured during constant rate iv infusion, were significantly lowered by pretreatment with diazepam (250 mg/kg) and Ro 15-1788 (20 mg/kg) administered 30 and 20 minutes, respectively, before seizure threshold measurement. It is proposed that this convulsive activity of diazepam is mediated through the picrotoxinin receptor.  相似文献   

16.
Gatch MB  Jung ME  Wallis CJ  Lal H 《Life sciences》2002,71(22):2657-2665
Male Long-Evans rats were trained to discriminate mCPP (1.4 mg/kg, i.p.) from saline, using a two-lever, food-reinforced operant task. The GABA(A) antagonist, bicuculline (0.16-0.64 mg/kg), partially substituted for mCPP, whereas the benzodiazepine antagonist, flumazenil (1-10 mg/kg), and the benzodiazepine inverse agonist, Ro 15-4513 (0.25-2.5 mg/kg), failed to substitute for mCPP. Bicuculline produced no change in response rate, whereas Ro 15-4513 dose-dependently decreased responding. Flumazenil produced a small increase in response rates. Flumazenil (10 mg/kg), Ro 15-4513 (1.25 mg/kg), and the benzodiazepine agonists alprazolam (0.64 mg/kg) and diazepam (5 mg/kg) full agonist all failed to block the mCPP discriminative stimulus. When given in combination with mCPP, Ro15-4513 and alprazolam both produced lower response rates than did mCPP alone, whereas flumazenil and diazepam did not significantly alter response rates. These findings provide evidence that GABA(A) antagonists modulate the discriminative stimulus effects of mCPP, but that these effects are not mediated by activity at the benzodiazepine site.  相似文献   

17.
Imidazobenzodiazepine (Ro 15-1788, 5 mg/kg) similarly to a lose dose of apomorphine (0.1 mg/kg) decreased the intensity of footshock aggression in male rats. Ro 15-1788 significantly potentiated the antiaggressive action of apomorphine. Pirenperone (0.01 mg/kg) potentiated the effect of both drugs, whereas haloperidol (0.01 mg/kg) had an opposite action. After long-term treatment with apomorphine and Ro 15-1788 the tolerance to their antiaggressive action developed. This change was in agreement with increased serotonin metabolism in the forebrain. Unlike the action on aggressive behavior, Ro 15-1788 similarly to haloperidol (0.05 mg/kg) decreased the motor depressant effect of apomorphine (0.01 mg/kg) in mice. This effect correlated with the lowered serotonin metabolism after Ro 15-1788 administration. Unlike apomorphine, Ro 15-1788 reversed catalepsy induced by haloperidol (0.25 mg/kg). Administration of pirenperone (0.03 mg/kg) and destruction of serotoninergic terminals by p-chloroamphetamine (2 X 15 mg/kg) significantly potentiated the sedative action of apomorphine. It appears that different action of Ro 15-1788 on behavioral effects of apomorphine is related to different influence of Ro-1788 on serotoninergic processes in the striatum and limbic structures.  相似文献   

18.
The recently discovered benzodiazepine antagonist Ro 15-1788 was characterized in binding studies, and its potency and selectivity were determined in vivo by interaction with drug-induced changes in dopamine turnover and cerebellar cGMP level. Ro 15-1788 reduced [3H]flunitrazepam binding in the brain in vivo with a potency similar to that of diazepam and effectively inhibited [3H]diazepam binding in vitro (IC50 = 2.3 +/- 0.6 nmol/liter). [3H]Ro 15-1788 bound to tissue fractions of rat cerebral cortex with an apparent dissociation (KD) of 1.0 +/- 0.1 nmol/liter. The in vitro potency of various benzodiazepines in displacing [3H]Ro 15-1788 from its binding site was of the same rank order as found previously in [3H]diazepam binding. Autoradiograms of [3H]Ro 15-1788 binding in sections of rat cerebellum showed the same distribution of radioactivity as with [3H]flunitrazepam. The attenuating effect of diazepam on the chlorpromazine- or stress-induced elevation of homovanillic acid in rat brain was antagonized by Ro 15-1788. Among a series of compounds which either decreased or increased the rat cerebellar cGMP level, only the effect of benzodiazepine receptor ligands (diazepam, zopiclone, CL 218 872) was antagonized by Ro 15-1788. Thus, Ro 15-1788 is a selective benzodiazepine antagonist acting at the level of the benzodiazepine receptor in the central nervous system. Peripheral benzodiazepine binding sites in kidney and schistosomes were not affected by Ro 15-1788.  相似文献   

19.
The effects of the benzodiazepine antagonist CGS 8216 (2-phenylpyrazolo[4,3-c]quinoline-3(5H)-one) were examined in a thirsty rat conflict test in the presence and absence of pentobarbital. CGS 8216 (2.5-10 mg/kg i.p.) did not affect nonpunished responding, but doses of 5 and 10 mg/kg significantly reduced the rate of punished responding (i.e., the number of 3 second drinking episodes in a "shock" contingency). However, a dose of CGS 8216 which did not significantly alter punished responding (2.5 mg/kg) antagonized the anticonflict actions of pentobarbital. These observations suggest that while high doses of CGS 8216 may elicit an "anxiogenic" response in rodents, lower doses of CGS 8216 antagonize the anticonflict actions of a compound which has been shown to enhance benzodiazepine affinity in vitro. These data imply that the anticonflict actions of pentobarbital may be mediated through benzodiazepine receptors.  相似文献   

20.
Intravenous injections of high doses of metkephamid (20 and 40 mg/kg) decreased responding by pigeons under a multiple fixed-ratio, fixed-interval schedule of grain presentation. Naloxone antagonized in a dose-related manner the suppression of behavior produced by 40 mg/kg of metkephamid. Daily maintenance on large doses (30 and 60 mg/kg PO) of dl-methadone produced a slight shift of the dose-effect curve of metkephamid to the right. The data suggest that the behavioral effects of metkephamid are due to an action at a mu-opioid receptor.  相似文献   

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