Behavioral effects of morphine and cocaine in M1 muscarinic acetylcholine receptor-deficient mice (original) (raw)
Abe K, Taguchi K, Kato M, Utsunomiya I, Chikuma T, Hojyo H, Miyatake T (2003) Characterization of muscarinic receptor subtypes in the rostral ventrolateral medulla and effects on morphine-induced antinociception in rats. Eur J Pharmacol 465:237–249 ArticlePubMedCAS Google Scholar
Adem A, Jolkkonen M, Bogdanovic N, Islam A, Karlsson E (1997) Locations of M1 muscarinic receptors in rat brain using selective muscarinic toxin-1. Brain Res Bull 44(5):597–601 ArticlePubMedCAS Google Scholar
Anagnostaras SG, Murphy GG, Hamilton SE, Mitchell SL, Rahnama NP, Nathanson NM, Sliva AJ (2003) Selective cognitive dysfunction in acetylcholine M1 muscarinic receptor mutant mice. Nat Neurosci 6(1):51–58 ArticlePubMedCAS Google Scholar
Basile AS, Federova I, Zapata A, Liu X, Shippenberg T, Duttaroy A, Yamada M, Wess J (2002) Deletion of the M5 muscarinic acetylcholine receptor attenuates morphine reinforcement and withdrawal but not morphine analgesia. Proc Natl Acad Sci 99(17):11452–11457 ArticlePubMedCAS Google Scholar
Bolam JP, Francis CM, Henderson Z (1991) Cholinergic input to dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra: a double immunocytochemical study. Neurosci 41:483–494 ArticleCAS Google Scholar
Brown JH, Taylor P (1996) Muscarinic receptor agonists and antagonists. In: Hardman JG, Limbird LE (eds) The pharmacological basis of therapeutics. McGraw-Hill, New York, pp 141–160 Google Scholar
Caulfield MP (1993) Muscarinic receptors—characterization, coupling, and function. Pharmacol Ther 58:319–379 ArticlePubMedCAS Google Scholar
Caulfield MP, Birdsall NJ (1998) Classification of muscarinic acetylcholine receptors. Pharmacol Rev 50:279–290 PubMedCAS Google Scholar
Cortes R, Palacios JM (1986) Muscarinic cholinergic receptor subtypes in the rat brain. I. Quantitative autoradiographic studies. Brain Res 362:227–238 ArticlePubMedCAS Google Scholar
Fink-Jensen A, Federova I, Wortwein G, Woldbye DPD, Rasmussen T, Thomsen M, Bolwig TG, Knitowski KM, McKinzie DL, Yamada M, Wess J, Basile A (2003) Role for M5 muscarinic acetylcholine receptors in cocaine addiction. J Neurosci 74:91–96 ArticleCAS Google Scholar
Gerber DJ, Sotnikova TD, Gainetdinov RR, Huang SY, Caron MG, Tonegawa S (2001) Hyperactivity, elevated dopaminergic transmission, and response to amphetamine in M1 muscarinic acetylcholine receptor-deficient mice. Proc Natl Acad Sci 98(26):15312–15317 ArticlePubMedCAS Google Scholar
Ghelardini C, Galeotti N, Matucci R, Bellucci C, Gualtieri F, Capaccioli S, Quattrone A, Bartolini A (1999) Antisense ‘knockdowns’ of M1 receptors induces transient anterograde amnesia in mice. Neuropharmacology 38:339–349 ArticlePubMedCAS Google Scholar
Glick SD, Cox RD (1975) Dopaminergic and cholinergic influences on morphine self-administration in rats. Res Commun Chem Pathol Pharmacol 12:17–24 PubMedCAS Google Scholar
Heidbreder CA, Shippenberg TS (1996) Evidence for an involvement of muscarinic cholinergic systems in the induction but not expression of behavioral sensitization to cocaine. Synapse 24:182–192 ArticlePubMedCAS Google Scholar
Honda K, Ando S, Koga K, Takano Y (2004) The spinal muscarinic receptor subtypes contribute to the morphine-induced antinociceptive effects in thermal stimulation in mice. Neurosci Lett 371:235–238 ArticlePubMedCAS Google Scholar
Itzhak Y, Martin JL (2000) Scopolamine inhibits cocaine-conditioned but not unconditioned stimulant effects in mice. Psychopharmacology 152:216–223 ArticlePubMedCAS Google Scholar
Iwamoto ET, Marion L (1994) Pharmacological evidence that nitric oxide mediates the antinociception produced by muscarinic agonists in the rostral ventral medulla of the rat. J Pharmacol Exp Ther 269:699–708 PubMedCAS Google Scholar
Kaakola S, Ahtee L (1977) Effect of muscarinic cholinergic drugs on morphine-induced catalepsy, antinociception, and changes in brain dopamine metabolism. Psychopharmacology 52(1):7–15 Article Google Scholar
Koob GF (1992) Drugs of abuse: anatomy, pharmacology, and function of reward pathways. Trends Pharmacol Sci 13:177–184 ArticlePubMedCAS Google Scholar
Levey AI (1993) Immunological localization of M1–M5 muscarinic acetylcholine receptors in peripheral tissues and brain. Life Sci 52:441–448 ArticlePubMedCAS Google Scholar
Levey AI, Kitt CA, Simonds WF, Price DL, Brann MR (1991) Identification and localization of muscarinic acetylcholine receptors in brain with subtype-specific antibodies. J Neurosci 11:3218–3226 PubMedCAS Google Scholar
Mash DC, Porter LT (1986) Autoradiographic localization of M1 and M2 muscarine receptors in the rat brain. Neurosci 19(2):551–564 ArticleCAS Google Scholar
Miyakawa T, Yamada M, Duttaroy A, Wess J (2001) Hyperactivity and intact hippocampus dependent learning in mice lacking the M1 muscarinic acetylcholine receptor. J Neurosci 21(14):5239–5250 PubMedCAS Google Scholar
Nathanson NM (1987) Molecular properties of the muscarinic acetylcholine receptor. Annu Rev Neurosci 10:195–236 ArticlePubMedCAS Google Scholar
Nonaka R, Moroji T (1984) Quantitative autoradiography of muscarinic cholinergic receptors in the rat brain. Brain Res 296:295–303 ArticlePubMedCAS Google Scholar
Oakman SA, Faris PL, Kerr PE, Cozzari C, Hortman BK (1995) Distribution of pontomesencephalic cholinergic neurons projecting to substantia nigra differs significantly from those projecting to ventral tegmental area. J Neurosci 15:5859–5869 PubMedCAS Google Scholar
Patterson TA, Lipton JR, Bennett EL, Rosenzweig MR (1990) Cholinergic receptor antagonists impair formation of intermediate-term memory in the chick. Behav Neural Biol 54(1):63–74 ArticlePubMedCAS Google Scholar
Ranaldi R, Woolverton W (2002) Self-administration of cocaine: scopolamine combinations by rhesus monkeys. Psychopharmacology 161:442–448 ArticlePubMedCAS Google Scholar
Schroeder JP, Packard MG (2002) Posttraining intra-basolateral amygdala scopolamine impairs food and amphetamine induced conditioned place preferences. Behav Neurosci 116(5):922–927 ArticlePubMed Google Scholar
See RE, McLaughlin J, Fuchs RA (2003) Muscarinic receptor antagonism in the basolateral amygdale blocks acquisition of cocaine stimulus association in a model of relapse to cocaine seeking behavior in rats. Neurosci 117:477–483 ArticleCAS Google Scholar
Sperber ES, Romero MT, Bodnar RJ (1986) Selective potentiation in opioid analgesia following scopolamine treatment. Psychopharmacology 89(2):175–176 ArticlePubMedCAS Google Scholar
Spinella M, Schaefer LA, Bodnar RJ (1997) Ventral medullary mediation of mesencephalic morphine analgesia by muscarinic and nicotinic cholinergic receptor antagonists in rats. Analgesia 3:119–130 CAS Google Scholar
Vilaro MT, Palacios JM, Mengod G (1990) Localization of m5 muscarinic receptor mRNA in rat brain examined by in situ hybridization histochemistry. Neurosci Lett 114:154–159 ArticlePubMedCAS Google Scholar
Vilaro MT, Mengod G, Palacios JM (1993) Advances and limitations of the molecular neuroanatomy of cholinergic receptors: the example of multiple muscarinic recepots. Prog Brain Res 98:95–101 ArticlePubMedCAS Google Scholar
Weiner DM, Levey AI, Brann MR (1990) Expression of muscarinic acetylcholine and dopamine receptor mRNAs in rat basal ganglia. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 87:7050–7054 ArticlePubMedCAS Google Scholar
Wess J (1996) Molecular biology of muscarinic acetylcholine receptors. Crit Rev Neurobiol 10:69–99 PubMedCAS Google Scholar
Wess J (2000) Physiological roles of G-protein-coupled receptor kinases revealed by gene-targeting technology. Trends Pharmacol Sci 21(10):364–367 ArticlePubMedCAS Google Scholar
Wess J, Duttaroy A, Gomeza J, Zhang W, Yamada M, Felder CC, Bernardini N, Reeh PW (2003) Muscarinic receptor subtypes mediating central and peripheral antinociception studied with muscarinic receptor knockout mice: a review. Life Sci 72:2047–2054 ArticlePubMedCAS Google Scholar
Yeomans J, Forster G, Blaha C (2001) M5 muscarinic receptors are needed for slow activation of dopamine neurons and for rewarding brain stimulation. Life Sci 68(22–23):2449–2456 ArticlePubMedCAS Google Scholar
Zarrindast MR, Fattahi Z, Rostami P, Rezayof A (2005) Role of the cholinergic system in the rat basolateral amygdale on morphine-induced conditioned place preference. Pharmacol Biochem Behav 82(1):1–10 ArticlePubMedCAS Google Scholar
Zhou H, Ge X, Wang LZ, Ma L, Pei G (1999) Attenuation of morphine tolerance and dependence in scopolamine treated rats. Neuroreport 10(10):2007–2010 ArticlePubMedCAS Google Scholar