Brain transcription factor expression: effects of acute and chronic amphetamine and injection stress.
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Abstract | :
Amphetamine influences behaviors and the expression of transcription factor genes in the central nervous system (CNS). A single d-amphetamine dose (7.5 mg/kg, i.p.) enhances behavioral stereotypy and augments brain expression of c-fos, fos-B, fra-1, zif268, jun-B, and c-jun by 2-11 fold. When the single amphetamine dose is preceded by 28 saline injections over 14 days, it is half as effective in enhancing expression of these genes. Rats injected with 7.5 mg/kg i.p. twice daily for 2 weeks and sacrificed after the last injection reveal further attenuation or abolition of the amphetamine-induced mRNA upregulation. These stigmata of 'tolerance' in gene expression display partial overlap with behavioral tolerance, manifest as changes in locomotor activity. Rats receiving low (2 mg/kg) amphetamine challenge doses following the 2-week 7.5 mg/kg b.i.d. amphetamine treatment show tolerance to the locomotor activating effects of the drug; no tolerance is evident following a high (7.5 mg/kg) challenge dose. These data suggest that amphetamine-induced alterations in brain transcription factor gene expression can display 'tolerance' and possibly 'cross-tolerance' with the stress caused by i.p. injection. |
Year of Publication | :
1993
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Journal | :
Brain research. Molecular brain research
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Volume | :
20
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Issue | :
1-2
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Number of Pages | :
91-100
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ISSN Number | :
0169-328X
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URL | :
https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/0169-328X(93)90113-4
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DOI | :
10.1016/0169-328x(93)90113-4
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Short Title | :
Brain Res Mol Brain Res
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