Mathews_2011_Int.J.Dev.Neurosci_29_501

Reference

Title : Heightened locomotor-activating effects of amphetamine administered into the nucleus accumbens in adolescent rats - Mathews_2011_Int.J.Dev.Neurosci_29_501
Author(s) : Mathews IZ , Brudzynski SM , McCormick CM
Ref : Int J Developmental Neuroscience , 29 :501 , 2011
Abstract :

There is a shift in sensitivity to systemically administered psychostimulants in adolescence, as evidenced by less amphetamine-induced locomotor activity in adolescent compared to adult rodents. Locomotor activating effects of amphetamine are dependent on drug actions in the core of the nucleus accumbens (NAc), but the contribution of this region to age differences in amphetamine sensitivity has not been studied directly. In the present study, we investigated the development of the NAc using targeted injections of amphetamine (0, 3, or 6 mug/side) directly into the NAc core in early (postnatal day 30; P30) or late (P45) adolescence, or in adulthood (P75). Locomotor activity was recorded during two 1h sessions, 48 h apart. Amphetamine increased locomotor activity at all ages. P45 rats were more active than adults only at the 3 mug/side dose, but this difference was not significant when baseline activity was taken into account. In contrast, P30 rats were more active than adults at the 6 mug/side dose, indicating that the magnitude of the locomotor response is highest in early adolescence. Results of the present study are the first to directly show a developmental difference in the sensitivity of the NAc to amphetamine under conditions in which the influence of pharmacokinetic factors and regulatory brain regions is minimized.

PubMedSearch : Mathews_2011_Int.J.Dev.Neurosci_29_501
PubMedID: 21616135

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Citations formats

Mathews IZ, Brudzynski SM, McCormick CM (2011)
Heightened locomotor-activating effects of amphetamine administered into the nucleus accumbens in adolescent rats
Int J Developmental Neuroscience 29 :501

Mathews IZ, Brudzynski SM, McCormick CM (2011)
Int J Developmental Neuroscience 29 :501