Jj. Clifford et Jl. Waddington, HETEROGENEITY OF BEHAVIORAL PROFILE BETWEEN 3 NEW PUTATIVE SELECTIVE D-3-DOPAMINE-RECEPTOR ANTAGONISTS USING AN ETHOLOGICALLY BASED APPROACH, Psychopharmacology, 136(3), 1998, pp. 284-290
The effects on behaviour of the putative selective D-3 dopamine recept
or antagonists GR 103691, nafadotride and U 99194A were compared with
those of the generic D-2-like antagonist haloperidol using an ethologi
cally based approach. Neither GR 103691 (0.008-1.0 mg/kg) nor nafadotr
ide (0.025-1.6 mg/kg) influenced any element of behaviour. Conversely,
U99194A (1.67-45 mg/kg) effected a dose-dependent stimulation of epis
odes of non-stereotyped sniffing, , locomotion, chewing and eating, wi
th some stimulation of rearing, and reduced baseline levels of groomin
g; thereafter, as sniffing and locomotion declined, stimulation of epi
sodes of grooming emerged. Haloperidol (0.0008-0.1 mg/kg) failed to pr
omote any element of behaviour and reduced baseline levels of grooming
; responsivity to U99194A was antagonised by pretreatment with haloper
idol. The lack of effect of GR 103691 (>100-fold D-3/D-2 selectivity)
and nafadotride (10-fold D-3/D-2 preference), in contrast to the chara
cteristic ''ethogram'' for U99194A (25-fold D-3/D-2 selectivity), indi
cated a fundamental difference in their mechanisms of action. This top
ography of responsivity to U99194A overlapped somewhat with the profil
es of both D-2-like and D-1-like agonists, and its sensitivity to anta
gonism by haloperidol also indicated a dopaminergic basis thereto. How
ever, differences among GR 103691, nafadotride and U99194A bore no rel
ation to their relative selectivities for the D-3 receptor. and the ba
sis thereof remains unclear. Theorising as to the behavioural role of
the D-3 receptor may need to be tempered pending the identification of
a range of chemically distinct D-3 antagonists of higher selectivity.