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Vol. 291, Issue 2, 688-704, November 1999
The Psychiatric Institute, Department of Psychiatry, University of
Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, Illinois
The effects of acute (single) and chronic (21-day)
administration of haloperidol (HAL), chlorpromazine (CPZ), or clozapine (CLOZ) on components of the phosphoinositide (PI)-signaling pathway were studied in rat brain. Chronic administration of HAL decreased protein kinase C (PKC) activity and mRNA and protein levels of PKC
and
isozymes in both membrane and cytosol fractions of cortex,
hippocampus, and striatum. Chronic administration of CPZ, however,
decreased PKC activity only in the membrane fraction of cortex,
hippocampus, and striatum, and had no effect on the levels of any PKC
isozymes. On the other hand, chronic administration of CLOZ decreased
PKC activity and mRNA and protein levels of PKC
,
, and
isozymes in membrane and cytosol fractions of cortex, hippocampus, and
cerebellum. Studies of the effects on phospholipase C (PLC) revealed
that only chronic administration of CPZ significantly decreased PI-PLC
activity and mRNA and protein levels of the specific PLC
1 isozyme in membrane and cytosol fractions of cortex,
hippocampus, cerebellum, and striatum. Acute-treatment data suggest
that CPZ or CLOZ had no significant effects on PI-PLC or PKC; however,
HAL translocated PKC, as evidenced from increased PKC activity and
protein levels of PKC
and
isozymes in the membrane fraction and
the decrease in these parameters in the cytosol fraction of cortex,
hippocampus, and striatum. Our results thus suggest that the
interaction of antipsychotic drugs with PKC and PLC may be associated
with their mechanisms of action.
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