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Prenatal phenobarbital treatment and temperature-controlling dopamine receptors
Authors:R Kuprys  B Tabakoff
Affiliation:1. Alcohol and Drug Abuse Research and Training Program, Department of Physiology and Biophysics University of Illinois at the Medical Center, Chicago, IL 60680, USA;2. Westside Veterans Administration Medical Center, Chicago, IL 60612, USA
Abstract:Pregnant mice were fed a phenobarbital-containing diet on days nine through 18 of pregnancy. Following parturition, the offspring of such animals were allowed to reach adulthood and then were tested for their response to an acute injection of apomorphine. Male offspring were less sensitive, while female offspring were more sensitive than matched controls to apomorphine-induced hypothermia. The witnessed differences in apomorphine-induced hypothermia could not be attributed to differences in brain apomorphine levels, alterations in the thermoregulation following non-drug challenges to the mouse's thermoregulatory ability, or changes in alpha-adrenergic receptor function. Our results suggest that prenatal phenobarbital administration produces changes in the function of dopamine receptors which regulate body temperature, and that the prenatally-induced changes last well into adulthood.
Keywords:Apomorphine  Body temperature  Dopamine receptors  Hypothalamus  Prenatal phenobarbital
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