Amphetamine-induced effects on neuropeptide Y in the rat brain

2005 
Repeated (+)-amphetamine sulfate (AMPH) administration (5 mg/kg sc twice daily for 6 days and once on day 7) markedly and reversibly decreased (until 96 h after the final dose) neuropeptide Y-like immunoreactivity (NPY-LI) in the rat striatum (caudate-putamen) and nucleus accumbens, and had no effect on NPY-LI in the hippocampus. No significant alterations were detected in the hybridization signal of NPY mRNA4 and 24 h after the end of AMPH treatment. A single dose of AMPH (5 mg/kg sc) administered to rats 4 and 24 h prior to sacrifice had no effect on NPY-LI in the brain structures studied. Moreover, AMPH injected 8 days after the last dose of repeated AMPH administration did not change NPY-LI up to 72 h. The minimal dose of haloperidol, the strong mixed dopaminergic D 2 /D 1 receptor antagonist, (0.75 mg/kg injected ip 30 min before each of the multiple AMPH administrations) that was sufficient to completely block stereotypy and hyperlocomotion elicited by multiple AMPH administrations enhanced the AMPH-induced decrease in the striatal and accumbens NPY-LI. Our results suggest that NPY neurons in the striatum, nucleus accumbens and hippocampus are not directly involved -in the acute behavioral response to AMPH (stereotypy and hyperlocomotion) as well as in the initiation and expression of AMPH-induced behavioral sensitization.
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