Selective Suppression of Cocaine- versus Food-Maintained Responding by Monoamine Releasers in Rhesus Monkeys: Benzylpiperazine, (+)Phenmetrazine, and 4-Benzylpiperidine
- Department of Pharmacology, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia (S.S.N.); Alcohol and Drug Abuse Research Center, McLean Hospital-Harvard Medical School, Belmont, Massachusetts (S.S.N., N.K.M.); Clinical Psychopharmacology Section, Intramural Research Program, National Institute on Drug Abuse, National Institutes of Health, Baltimore, Maryland (M.H.B., R.B.R.); and Chemistry and Life Sciences, Research Triangle Institute, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina (B.E.B.)
- Address correspondence to:
S. Stevens Negus, Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, Virginia Commonwealth University, 410 N. 12th St., Richmond, VA 23298. E-mail: ssnegus{at}vcu.edu
Abstract
Monoamine releasers constitute one class of drugs currently under investigation as potential agonist medications for the treatment of cocaine dependence. The efficacy and safety of monoamine releasers as candidate medications may be influenced in part by their relative potency to release dopamine and serotonin, and we reported previously that releasers with approximately 30-fold selectivity for dopamine versus serotonin release may be especially promising. The present study examined the effects of the releasers benzylpiperazine, (+)phenmetrazine, and 4-benzylpiperidine, which have 20- to 48-fold selectivity in vitro for releasing dopamine versus serotonin. In an assay of cocaine discrimination, rhesus monkeys were trained to discriminate 0.4 mg/kg i.m. cocaine from saline in a two-key, food-reinforced procedure. Each of the releasers produced a dose- and time-dependent substitution for cocaine. 4-Benzylpiperidine had the most rapid onset and shortest duration of action. Phenmetrazine and benzylpiperazine had slower onsets and longer durations of action. In an assay of cocaine self-administration, rhesus monkeys were trained to respond for cocaine injections and food pellets under a second order schedule. Treatment for 7 days with each of the releasers produced a dose-dependent and selective reduction in self-administration of cocaine (0.01 mg/kg/injection). The most selective effects were produced by phenmetrazine. Phenmetrazine also produced a downward shift in the cocaine self-administration dose effect curve, virtually eliminating responding maintained by a 30-fold range of cocaine doses (0.0032–0.1 mg/kg/injection) while having only small and transient effects on food-maintained responding. These findings support the potential utility of dopamine-selective releasers as candidate treatments for cocaine dependence.
Footnotes
-
This work was supported in part by the Intramural Research program of the National Institutes of Health [National Institute on Drug Abuse]; and by the National Institutes of Health [Grants R01-DA02519, R01-DA12970, P01-DA14528, K05-DA00101].
-
Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at http://jpet.aspetjournals.org.
-
doi:10.1124/jpet.108.143701.
-
ABBREVIATIONS: FR, fixed ratio; VR, variable ratio.
-
- Received July 21, 2008.
- Accepted January 8, 2009.
- U.S. Government work not protected by U.S. copyright



