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Vol. 61, Issue 2, 360-368, February 2002
an
Sket, and
Brain Research Laboratory, Institute of Pathophysiology, School of
Medicine, University of Ljubljana, Ljubljana, Slovenia
Parkinsonism, a common unwanted side effect of typical
antipsychotic (neuroleptic) drugs, is induced by the blockade of
striatal dopamine D2 receptors. In rats with hemi-parkinsonism induced by unilateral lesion of dopaminergic nigrostriatal neurons with 6-hydroxydopamine, D2 antagonists inhibit contralateral turning induced
by D2 agonists and augment the levels of neurotensin mRNA in
dopaminergically intact striatum. By contrast, D1 agonists induce
contralateral turning and augment neurotensin mRNA levels in
dopamine-depleted striatum. These effects could be inhibited by D1 but
not by D2 antagonists. Here we used a hemi-parkinsonian model to
investigate the effects of putative D1 agonist/D2 antagonist LEK-8829
(9,10-didehydro-N-methyl-(2-propynyl)-6-methyl-8-aminomethylergoline bimaleinate), an experimental antipsychotic, on turning behavior and
the expression of striatal neurotensin, preprotachykinin and neurotransmitter-induced early gene protein 4 (ania-4) mRNAs. We found
that LEK-8829 inhibited contralateral turning induced by D2 agonist
quinpirole, but only if the rats were cotreated with D1 antagonist
SCH-23390. In situ hybridization showed that LEK-8829 induced the
expression of neurotensin and ania-4 mRNAs in dopamine-intact striatum
that could be completely blocked only by the combined treatment with
SCH-23390 and quinpirole. In addition, LEK-8829 augmented the
expression of neurotensin, preprotachykinin and ania-4 mRNAs in
dopamine-depleted striatum that could be completely blocked by
SCH-23390. This study clearly demonstrates that in hemi-parkinsonian
rats D1 agonistic activity of LEK-8829 confers its anti-parkinsonian
drug-like properties and modulates its neuroleptic drug-like
properties, which are dependent on the blockade of dopamine D2
receptors. These findings imply that atypical antipsychotics with D1
intrinsic activity might have a reduced propensity for the induction of
extrapyramidal syndrome.
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