Ea. Mariathasan et Ip. Stolerman, OVERSHADOWING OF NICOTINE DISCRIMINATION IN RATS - A MODEL FOR BEHAVIORAL MECHANISMS OF DRUG-INTERACTIONS, Behavioural pharmacology, 4(3), 1993, pp. 209-215
Overshadowing can play an important role in conditioning with compound
exteroceptive stimuli. Drug discrimination experiments have been carr
ied out to examine overshadowing when mixtures of drugs serve as compo
und interoceptive stimuli. Three groups of rats were trained in a two-
bar operant procedure with a tandem schedule of food reinforcement (n
= 8). All rats were trained to discriminate (-)-nicotine (0.32 mg/kg s
.c.) from saline, but in two groups of animals midazolam (0.1 or 0.2 m
g/kg s.c.) was co-administered with the nicotine to generate a compoun
d stimulus. Dose-response curves were determined with nicotine and mid
azolam in each group. In rats trained with nicotine alone, there was a
steep dose-response curve for the discriminative stimulus effect of n
icotine. The presence of the smaller dose of midazolam in the training
stimulus clearly attenuated, and the larger dose prevented, the appea
rance of the discriminative effect of nicotine, whereas there was a co
ncomitant increase in the discriminative response to midazolam. These
results suggest that midazolam overshadowed the response to nicotine i
n a dose-related manner. In rats trained with nicotine alone, the same
doses of midazolam had no effect on the discriminative response estab
lished to the nicotine stimulus, indicating the absence of pharmacolog
ical antagonism. The results illustrate how conditioning factors may p
rovide a behavioural mechanism for interactions between abused drugs.