4.0 Article

Amphetamine decreases behavioral inhibition by stimulation of dopamine D-2, but not D-3, receptors

Journal

BEHAVIOURAL PHARMACOLOGY
Volume 20, Issue 5-6, Pages 484-491

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/FBP.0b013e3283305e3b

Keywords

amphetamine; dopamine D-2 receptors; dopamine D-3 receptors; impulsivity; premature responding; rat

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Behavioral disinhibition is a manifestation of impulsive behavior that is prominent in the psychopathology of various psychiatric disorders such as addiction, attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, mania, and personality disorders. Impulsivity may be studied by measuring anticipatory responses made before the presentation of a food-predictive, brief light stimulus in a two-choice serial reaction time task. In such serial reaction time tasks, amphetamine has been shown to produce dose-dependent increases in premature responding in a manner dependent on dopamine D-2-like receptor stimulation. So far, it is unknown whether it is the D-2 or D-3 receptor that is involved in this form of impulsivity. In this study, rats were trained in a two-choice serial reaction time task until baseline performance was stable. Next, effects of the dopamine D-2 preferring antagonist L-741,626 and selective D-3 antagonist SB-277011 were assessed alone and in the presence of amphetamine. Neither L-741,626 nor SB-277011 affected behavioral inhibition, although the latter significantly increased reaction time at 10 mg/kg. Amphetamine dose-dependently increased impulsivity. The effect of amphetamine was attenuated by L-741,626 (3 mg/kg), whereas SB-277011 (3 mg/kg) had no effect. Therefore, amphetamine-induced behavioral disinhibition depends on D-2, but not D-3, receptor stimulation. Behavioural Pharmacology 20:484-491 (C) 2009 Wolters Kluwer Health vertical bar Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.

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