Modulation of aggressive behavior in mice by nicotinic receptor subtypes
Autor: | Philip H. Smith, Marina R. Picciotto, Yann S. Mineur, Emma L.M. Cahuzac, Alan S. Lewis |
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Rok vydání: | 2015 |
Předmět: |
Agonist
Male Nicotine medicine.drug_class Aconitine Nicotinic Antagonists Pharmacology Receptors Nicotinic Biochemistry Partial agonist Article chemistry.chemical_compound Mice GTS-21 medicine Animals Nicotinic Agonists Methyllycaconitine Mice Inbred BALB C Behavior Animal business.industry Dihydro-beta-Erythroidine Serenic Aggression Mice Inbred C57BL Nicotinic acetylcholine receptor Nicotinic agonist chemistry business medicine.drug |
Zdroj: | Biochemical pharmacology. 97(4) |
ISSN: | 1873-2968 |
Popis: | Aggression is frequently comorbid with neuropsychiatric conditions and is a predictor of worse outcomes, yet current pharmacotherapies are insufficient and have debilitating side effects, precluding broad use. Multiple models of aggression across species suggest that the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) agonist nicotine has anti-aggressive (serenic) properties. Here we demonstrate dose-dependent serenic effects of acute nicotine administration in three distinct mouse strains: C57BL/6, BALB/c, and CD1. While acute nicotine administration (0.25 mg/kg) modestly reduced solitary homecage locomotion, this could not account for nicotine’s serenic effects since social encounters eliminated the hypolocomotor effect, and nicotine did not alter social interaction times. Pretreatment with the homomeric (α7 subunit) nAChR antagonist methyllycaconitine (5 mg/kg), but not the heteromeric (β2 or β4 subunit-containing) nAChR antagonist dihydro-β-erythroidine (DHβE, 3 mg/kg), blocked the serenic effects of nicotine. By contrast, pretreatment with DHβE blocked the effect of acute nicotine administration on locomotion, uncoupling nicotine’s serenic and hypolocomotor effects. Finally, the α7 nAChR partial agonist GTS-21 reduced aggression in C57BL/6 mice. These results support the idea that acute nicotine administration has serenic effects and provide evidence for specificity of this effect distinct from effects on locomotion. Furthermore, pharmacological studies suggest that activation of α7 nAChRs underlies the serenic effects of nicotine. Further studies of nAChRs could enhance understanding of the neurobiology of aggression and may lead to the development of novel, more specific treatments for pathological aggression. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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