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Vol. 289, Issue 1, 38-47, April 1999
Department of Psychiatry, University of California at San Francisco
and San Francisco Veterans Affairs Medical Center, San Francisco,
California
In the present study, we investigated the effects of
selective activation or inhibition of ventral tegmental area (VTA)
adenylate cyclase (AC) and protein kinase A (PKA) on long-term
sensitization induced by repeated intra-VTA or peripheral amphetamine
(AMPH). Selective inhibition of AC by SQ 22,536 (9-(tetrahydro-2-furanyl)-9H-purin-6-amine; 100 nmol/side bilateral into VTA) had no effect on acute basal locomotion
but attenuated the locomotor stimulation induced by acute i.p. AMPH
(1.5 mg/kg). Coinjection of SQ 22,536 (100 nmol/side) fully blocked the
sensitization induced by repeated intra-VTA AMPH (15 nmol/side) but had
no detectable effect on the sensitization induced by repeated i.p.
AMPH. Persistent activation of AC by intra-VTA cholera toxin (500 ng/side) modestly increased acute locomotion and induced a robust
sensitization to i.p. AMPH challenge 10 days after the last of three
repeated VTA microinjections. Selective inhibition of PKA by
Rp-adenosine-3',5'-cyclic monophosphothioate triethylamine (Rp-cAMPS;
25 nmol/side) had no effect on acute basal or AMPH-stimulated
locomotion. Coinjection of Rp-cAMPS (25 nmol/side) fully blocked the
sensitization induced by repeated intra-VTA AMPH but had no effect on
sensitization induced by repeated i.p. AMPH. Intra-VTA microinjection
of the selective PKA activator Sp-adenosine-3',5'-cyclic
monophosphothioate triethylamine (Sp-cAMPS; 25-100 nmol/side)
dose-dependently stimulated acute locomotion and exerted synergistic
effects on locomotor activity when coinfused into the VTA with AMPH but
had no detectable effect on acute i.p. AMPH-induced locomotion.
Repeated intra-VTA Sp-cAMPS did not induce sensitization to AMPH
challenge but potentiated the sensitization induced by repeated i.p.
AMPH. These results suggest that VTA cAMP signal transduction is
necessary for the induction of persistent sensitization to intra-VTA
amphetamine and that peripheral and intra-VTA AMPH may not induce
behavioral sensitization by identical mechanisms.
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