Ol. Eradiri et Ms. Starr, Striatal dopamine depletion and behavioural sensitization induced by methamphetamine and 3-nitropropionic acid, EUR J PHARM, 386(2-3), 1999, pp. 217-226
The neurotoxic effects of methamphetamine (4 x 5 mg/kg i.p. at 2-h interval
s) and 3-nitropropionic acid (20 mg/kg i.p. on days 1-4 and 6-9, saline on
day 5), administered alone or in combination (3-nitropropionic acid as abov
e and methamphetamine on day 5), were investigated in rats 1 week after the
last injection. Neither methamphetamine nor 3-nitropropionic acid on their
own altered brain dopamine levels, but in combination, they selectively lo
wered dopamine in the terminal regions of the corpus striatum and nucleus a
ccumbens. Methamphetamine depleted 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) in the striat
um, while 3-nitropropionic acid depleted 5-HT in the accumbens and substant
ia nigra, but a combination of the two toxins failed to lower 5-HT in any o
f these brain regions. Measurements of aromatic L-amino acid decarboxylase
activity disclosed no change in the capacity to decarboxylate L-3,4-dihydro
xyphenylalanine in any region with any of the treatments, but a lowered cap
acity to decarboxylate 5-hydroxytryptophan in the nigra after all three tre
atments. Methamphetamine evoked characteristic hyperactivity and stereotypy
in the animals, whereas 3-nitropropionic gave rise to early hypermotility
followed by hypoactivity. At 1 week after treatment with 3-nitropropionic/m
ethamphetamine, rats exhibited normal spontaneous motor behaviour, a poor r
esponse to dopamine D-1 receptor stimulation and an exaggerated response to
dopamine D-2 receptor agonists. These results show that combined systemic
treatment with methamphetamine and 3-nitropropionic acid partially depletes
dopamine in the basal ganglia, rendering the animals supersensitive to dop
amine D-2 receptor activation without altering their spontaneous locomotion
. (C) 1999 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.