Abstract
Previous studies demonstrated that sigma-receptor (σR) antagonists alone fail to alter cocaine self-administration despite blocking various other effects of cocaine. However, σR antagonists when combined with dopamine transporter (DAT) inhibitors substantially decrease cocaine self-administration. To better understand the effects of this combination, the present study examined the effects of σR antagonist and DAT inhibitor combinations in male rats discriminating cocaine (10 mg/kg, i.p.) from saline injections. The DAT inhibitors alone (WIN 35,428 and methylphenidate) at low (0.1 mg/kg) doses that were minimally active, failed to shift the dose-effect function for discriminative-stimulus effects of cocaine to the left more than two-fold. At 0.32 mg/kg the DAT inhibitors alone shifted the cocaine dose-effect function leftward 24- or 6.6-fold, respectively. The σR antagonists (BD1008, BD1047, and BD1063) failed to fully substitute for cocaine, though BD1008 and BD1047 substituted partially. At 10 mg/kg, BD1008, BD1047, or BD1063 alone shifted the cocaine dose-effect function leftward less than 6.0-fold. In combination with 0.1 mg/kg WIN 35,428, the 10 mg/kg doses of σR antagonists shifted the cocaine dose-effect function from 12.3 to 36.7-fold leftward, and with 0.32 mg/kg WIN 35,428 from 14.3 to 440-fold leftward. In combination with 0.1 mg/kg methylphenidate, those σR antagonist doses shifted the cocaine dose-effect function from 5.5 to 55.0-fold leftward and with 0.32 mg/kg methylphenidate from 10.5 to 48.1-fold leftward. The present results suggest that dual DAT/σR inhibition produces agonist-like subjective effects that may promote decreases in self-administration obtained in previous studies.
Significance Statement There is currently no approved medication for treating stimulant abuse, though dopamine-uptake inhibitors in combination with sigma-receptor (σR) antagonists decrease cocaine self-administration in laboratory animals. The present study assessed how this combination alters the discriminative-stimulus effects of cocaine in male rats. Results suggest that concurrent dopamine uptake inhibition and σR antagonism together may promote decreases in self-administration possibly by mimicking the subjective effects extant when subjects cease continued cocaine self-administration.
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