D(1)-like receptor activation improves PCP-induced cognitive deficits in animal models: Implications for mechanisms of improved cognitive function in schizophrenia.
Eur Neuropsychopharmacol. 2009 Jun; 19(6):440-50.EN

Abstract

Phencyclidine (PCP) produces cognitive deficits of relevance to schizophrenia in animal models. The aim was to investigate the efficacy of the D(1)-like receptor agonist, SKF-38393, to improve PCP-induced deficits in the novel object recognition (NOR) and operant reversal learning (RL) tasks. Rats received either sub-chronic PCP (2 mg/kg) or vehicle for 7 days, followed by a 7-day washout. Rats were either tested in NOR or the RL tasks. In NOR, vehicle rats successfully discriminated between novel and familiar objects, an effect abolished in PCP-treated rats. SKF-38393 (6 mg/kg) significantly ameliorated the PCP-induced deficit (P<0.01) an effect significantly antagonised by SCH-23390 (0.05 mg/kg), a D(1)-like receptor antagonist (P<0.01). In the RL task sub-chronic PCP significantly reduced performance in the reversal phase (P<0.001); SKF-38393 (6.0 mg/kg) improved this PCP-induced deficit, an effect antagonised by SCH-23390 (P<0.05). These results suggest a role for D(1)-like receptors in improvement of cognitive function in paradigms of relevance to schizophrenia.

Links

Publisher Full Text
Aggregator Full Text

Authors+Show Affiliations

McLean SL
Bradford School of Pharmacy, University of Bradford, Bradford, West Yorkshire BD71DP, UK. s.l.mclean@bradford.ac.uk
Idris NF
No affiliation info available
Woolley ML
No affiliation info available
Neill JC
No affiliation info available

MeSH

2,3,4,5-Tetrahydro-7,8-dihydroxy-1-phenyl-1H-3-benzazepineAnimalsAvoidance LearningBehavior, AnimalBenzazepinesCognition DisordersConditioning, OperantDisease Models, AnimalDopamine AgonistsDopamine AntagonistsDose-Response Relationship, DrugDrug InteractionsFemaleNeuropsychological TestsPhencyclidineReceptors, Dopamine D1Recognition, Psychology

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

19268547