File_1998_Behav.Neurosci_112_1423

Reference

Title : Bimodal modulation by nicotine of anxiety in the social interaction test: role of the dorsal hippocampus - File_1998_Behav.Neurosci_112_1423
Author(s) : File SE , Kenny PJ , Ouagazzal AM
Ref : Behavioral Neuroscience , 112 :1423 , 1998
Abstract :

In conditions generating moderate levels of anxiety in the social interaction test (low light, unfamiliar arena or high light, familiar arena), parenteral administration of nicotine had bimodal actions, low doses (0.01 and 0.1 mg/kg i.p.) had anxiolytic effects and high doses (0.5 and 1.0 mg/kg i.p.) had anxiogenic effects. In test conditions where anxiety was lowest (low light, familiar arena) and highest (high light, unfamiliar arena), nicotine was without effect after intraperitoneal or hippocampal administration. Thus, nicotine plays a modulatory role in which the activity of other neurotransmitters is crucial to its expression. After bilateral administration to the dorsal hippocampus, nicotine (0.1-8.0 microg) had anxiogenic effects in conditions of moderate anxiety; mecamylamine (30 ng) was silent in these conditions, indicating no intrinsic tone. Our results show that the dorsal hippocampus is one area that can mediate anxiogenic effects in the social interaction test, but the brain region mediating anxiolytic effects remains to be identified.

PubMedSearch : File_1998_Behav.Neurosci_112_1423
PubMedID: 9926824

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Citations formats

File SE, Kenny PJ, Ouagazzal AM (1998)
Bimodal modulation by nicotine of anxiety in the social interaction test: role of the dorsal hippocampus
Behavioral Neuroscience 112 :1423

File SE, Kenny PJ, Ouagazzal AM (1998)
Behavioral Neuroscience 112 :1423