Ja. Smith et al., Does MK-801 discrimination constitute an animal model of schizophrenia useful for detecting atypical antipsychotics?, PHARM BIO B, 64(2), 1999, pp. 429-433
Two groups of female Wistar rats were trained to discriminate two doses (0.
075 and 0.0375 mg/kg) of the noncompetitive NMDA antagonist MK-801 (dizocil
pine) in a food-rewarded operant FR30 drug discrimination task. The atypica
l neuroleptic clozapine (2-6 mg/kg) produced only minimal antagonism (max.
32%) of the MK-801 cue at either training dose, and the "antagonist" effect
s were not clearly dose related. Furthermore, in the 0.075 mg/kg trained an
imals clozapine at 3 mg/kg failed to shift the MK-801 dose-response curve t
o the right. The alpha(1)-adrenoceptor antagonist prazosin (1-8 mg/kg) was
also tested for antagonism of the 0.0375 mg/kg MK-801 cue, and again, only
partial antagonism was seen (maximum 36%). Recently, it was suggested [4] t
hat as the discriminative stimulus produced by MK-801 (0.075 mg/kg) was ful
ly antagonized by clozapine at 3 mg/kg, but not by the typical neuroleptic
haloperidol, this assay may be a useful screen for detecting atypical neuro
leptics. It would seem, however, that this is not necessarily the case, and
that the MK-801 discriminative cue may not be psychotomimetic. However, as
this was a food rewarded rather than an avoidance paradigm that was used i
n the prior study [4], it may be that the drug discrimination procedure its
elf is a critical factor, although this hypothesis requires empirical testi
ng. (C) 1999 Elsevier Science Inc.