» Articles » PMID: 17062377

Behavioural Sensitization in Addiction, Schizophrenia, Parkinson's Disease and Dyskinesia

Overview
Journal Neurotox Res
Publisher Springer
Specialty Neurology
Date 2006 Oct 26
PMID 17062377
Citations 19
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Incentive learning takes place when dopaminergic neurons are activated, usually by rewards. As a result, previously neutral stimuli associated with reward acquire incentive salience and thus the ability to elicit approach or other responses in the future. Incentive learning is assumed to underlie psychostimulant-induced context-dependent sensitization that may play a prominent role in the development of addiction, in dyskinesia, and in amphetamine-induced psychosis. Assuming that these pathological states are due to the gradual process of sensitization, the effects of therapeutics might be manifested as a gradual desensitization. This assumption could explain the delay between onset of cellular effects of drugs (e.g., dopamine receptor blockade) and the improvement in symptoms (e.g., decreases in psychotic symptoms). Reduced dopamine activity results in behavioural changes that are opposite to psychostimulant-induced sensitization, i.e., rewarded behaviours decline in an extinction-like fashion despite the presence and consumption of rewards. We show here that also non reward-related behaviour, i.e., motor activity and catalepsy, follows the same rules: motility is not switched off by dopamine receptor blockade or by 6-hydroxydopamine lesions, but shows a test-to-test extinction-like decline. Thus, psychostimulant-induced sensitization and dopamine-deficiency induced decline of behaviour follows similar rules but in opposite directions.

Citing Articles

Cannabidiol improves haloperidol-induced motor dysfunction in zebrafish: a comparative study with a dopamine activating drug.

Hasumi A, Maeda H J Cannabis Res. 2023; 5(1):6.

PMID: 36871008 PMC: 9985202. DOI: 10.1186/s42238-023-00177-w.


Kinesthesia and Temporal Experience: On the 'Knitting and Unknitting' Process of Bodily Subjectivity in Schizophrenia.

Sanchez C, Moskalewicz M Diagnostics (Basel). 2022; 12(11).

PMID: 36359562 PMC: 9689052. DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics12112720.


Pharmaco-Magnetic Resonance as a Tool for Monitoring the Medication-Related Effects in the Brain May Provide Potential Biomarkers for Psychotic Disorders.

Aryutova K, Stoyanov D Int J Mol Sci. 2021; 22(17).

PMID: 34502214 PMC: 8430741. DOI: 10.3390/ijms22179309.


The role of CYP2D in rat brain in methamphetamine-induced striatal dopamine and serotonin release and behavioral sensitization.

Stocco M, El-Sherbeni A, Zhao B, Novalen M, Tyndale R Psychopharmacology (Berl). 2021; 238(7):1791-1804.

PMID: 33649968 PMC: 8233297. DOI: 10.1007/s00213-021-05808-9.


Conditioned increase of locomotor activity induced by haloperidol.

De La Casa L, Carcel L, Ruiz-Salas J, Vicente L, Mena A PLoS One. 2018; 13(10):e0200178.

PMID: 30281607 PMC: 6169844. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0200178.


References
1.
Snyder S . Catecholamines in the brain as mediators of amphetamine psychosis. Arch Gen Psychiatry. 1972; 27(2):169-79. DOI: 10.1001/archpsyc.1972.01750260021004. View

2.
Carlezon Jr W, Mendrek A, Wise R . MK-801 disrupts the expression but not the development of bromocriptine sensitization: a state-dependency interpretation. Synapse. 1995; 20(1):1-9. DOI: 10.1002/syn.890200102. View

3.
Tzschentke T, Schmidt W . Glutamatergic mechanisms in addiction. Mol Psychiatry. 2003; 8(4):373-82. DOI: 10.1038/sj.mp.4001269. View

4.
Wise R, Spindler J, Legault L . Major attenuation of food reward with performance-sparing doses of pimozide in the rat. Can J Psychol. 1978; 32(2):77-85. DOI: 10.1037/h0081678. View

5.
Beninger R . The role of dopamine in locomotor activity and learning. Brain Res. 1983; 287(2):173-96. DOI: 10.1016/0165-0173(83)90038-3. View