MICROINJECTIONS OF FLUPENTIXOL INTO THE CAUDATE-PUTAMEN BUT NOT THE NUCLEUS-ACCUMBENS, AMYGDALA OR FRONTAL-CORTEX OF RATS PRODUCE INTRA-SESSION DECLINES IN FOOD-REWARDED OPERANT RESPONDING
Rj. Beninger et R. Ranaldi, MICROINJECTIONS OF FLUPENTIXOL INTO THE CAUDATE-PUTAMEN BUT NOT THE NUCLEUS-ACCUMBENS, AMYGDALA OR FRONTAL-CORTEX OF RATS PRODUCE INTRA-SESSION DECLINES IN FOOD-REWARDED OPERANT RESPONDING, Behavioural brain research, 55(2), 1993, pp. 203-212
Results of recent studies suggest that dopamine (DA) transmission in t
he caudate-putamen may be involved in food reward-related learning. Th
e purpose of the present study was to evaluate this hypothesis by inje
cting the DA antagonist cis-flupenthixol (25 mug in 0.5 mul) into the
dorsal caudate-putamen of rats (n = 19) trained to lever press for foo
d presented according to a variable interval 30-s schedule. Additional
groups received non-reward (n = 8), systemic cis-flupenthixol (0.0 1,
0. 1 mg/kg i.p.; ns = 8), dorsal caudate-putamen injections of the in
active isomer trans-flupenthixol (n = 10), frontal cortical (dorsal to
the caudate-putamen site) injections of cis-flupenthixol (n = 6), or
cis- or trans-flupenthixol injected into the nucleus accumbens (ns = 9
, 8) or amygdala (ns = 6, 5). Rats were tested in 30-min sessions and
response rates were recorded every 5 min. As expected, non-reward prod
uced a gradual decline in responding. A similar pattern was seen in th
e groups receiving systemic (0. 1 mg/kg) or dorsal caudate-putamen inj
ections of cis-flupenthixol. No significant effect was seen following
systemic (0.01 mg/kg), cortical or amygdala cis-flupenthixol or dorsal
caudate-putamen or amygdala trans-flupenthixol. Accumbens cis-flupent
hixol reduced rates but did not produce a gradual decline in respondin
g; however, accumbens trans-flupenthixol led to a time-dependent eleva
tion in response rates making interpretation of the accumbens results
difficult. It was concluded that dopaminergic projections to the dorsa
l caudate-putamen may play a critical role in mediating the effects of
food-reward on operant responding.