The dopaminergic system is clearly implicated as important in mediating the effects of many drugs of abuse, as well as Parkinsons disease, and schizophrenia. Our studies have as their goals the determination of the functional significance of the dopamine system in normal functioning, as well as how it acts to subserve drug abuse. One specific objective is to better characterize the pharmacology of the various subtypes of CNS dopamine receptors. Included in this goal is the identification of drugs that act selectively and with high efficacy. In many cases the pharmacological tools for the study of these receptor subtypes in vivo and in vitro are limited. As a result, one further goal is the discovery of new synthetic entities that will allow analysis of the pharmacology of these dopamine receptor subtypes. These studies have indicated that: (1) Many of the known dopamine D2 agonists also have affinity for dopamine D3 receptors. Studies are being conducted in order to discover drugs that are selective for either D2 or D3 receptors. Recent studies have focused on the putative D3 receptor agonists 7-OH-DPAT, quinpirole, and PD 128,907. These three preferential D3 agonists produced subjective effects that were similar, based on their interchangeability in rats trained to discriminate these drugs from saline injections. In addition, the pharmacology of each of these drugs was similar to the others based on the spectrum of compounds that exhibited pharmacological equivalence. Most important, the selective D2 agonist, U91356A, fully substituted for both PD 128,907 and 7-OH-DPAT. This result suggests that the subjective effects of these D3 agonists were mediated by actions at D2 dopamine receptors. This result may be related to the relatively lower level of D3 receptors in the CNS compared to D2 receptors. Currently, there is no known function for this class of dopamine receptors. Interestingly, cocaine failed to substitute for either 7-OH-DPAT or PD 128,907, suggesting that the complexity of actions of cocaine render its subjective effects substantially different from those of direct acting agonists. - Dopamine, mechanisms, behavior

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
Type
Intramural Research (Z01)
Project #
1Z01DA000105-10
Application #
6289583
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (PPRB)
Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
Budget End
Support Year
10
Fiscal Year
1999
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
National Institute on Drug Abuse
Department
Type
DUNS #
City
State
Country
United States
Zip Code
Tanda, Gianluigi; Katz, Jonathan L (2007) Muscarinic preferential M(1) receptor antagonists enhance the discriminative-stimulus effects of cocaine in rats. Pharmacol Biochem Behav 87:400-4
Katz, Jonathan L; Kopajtic, Theresa A; Terry, Philip (2006) Effects of dopamine D1-like receptor agonists on food-maintained operant behavior in rats. Behav Pharmacol 17:303-9
Desai, Rajeev I; Terry, Philip; Katz, Jonathan L (2005) A comparison of the locomotor stimulant effects of D1-like receptor agonists in mice. Pharmacol Biochem Behav 81:843-8
Katz, Jonathan L; Higgins, Stephen T (2003) The validity of the reinstatement model of craving and relapse to drug use. Psychopharmacology (Berl) 168:21-30
McMillan, Donald E; Katz, Jonathan L (2002) Continuing implications of the early evidence against the drive-reduction hypothesis of the behavioral effects of drugs. Psychopharmacology (Berl) 163:251-64
Chausmer, Allison L; Elmer, Gregory I; Rubinstein, Marcelo et al. (2002) Cocaine-induced locomotor activity and cocaine discrimination in dopamine D2 receptor mutant mice. Psychopharmacology (Berl) 163:54-61
Chausmer, Allison L; Katz, Jonathan L (2002) Comparison of interactions of D1-like agonists, SKF 81297, SKF 82958 and A-77636, with cocaine: locomotor activity and drug discrimination studies in rodents. Psychopharmacology (Berl) 159:145-53
Mead, Andy N; Rocha, Beatriz A; Donovan, David M et al. (2002) Intravenous cocaine induced-activity and behavioural sensitization in norepinephrine-, but not dopamine-transporter knockout mice. Eur J Neurosci 16:514-20
Mead, Andy N; Katz, Jonathan L; Rocha, Beatriz A (2002) Intravenous cocaine-induced activity in A/J and C57BL/6J mice: behavioral sensitization and conditioned activity. Neuropharmacology 42:976-86
Bergman, Jack; Katz, Jonathan L; Miczek, Klaus A (2002) The experimental imperative. Psychopharmacology (Berl) 163:249-50

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