Hyposensitivity to serotonergic stimulation in protein malnourished rats |
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Authors: | R D Hall J P Leahy W M Robertson |
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Affiliation: | Worcester Foundation for Experimental Biology, 222 Maple Avenue, Shrewsbury, MA 01545 USA |
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Abstract: | Rats subjected to early protein malnutrition have higher levels of brain serotonin (5-HT) than well-nourished rats. In the present study we asked whether the elevated 5-HT levels of associated with any changes in sensitivity to serotonergic stimulation. In four different behavioral tets the effects of the 5-HT agonist N,N-dimethyltryptamine (DMT) were, with only a few exceptions, smaller in rats malnourished during both pre- and postweaning stages of development or during just one period or the other. In Experiment 1 the 5-HT syndrome induced by DMT was weaker in malnourished rats than in well-nourished ones. In Experiments 2 and 3, DMT was not a disruptive to malnourished rats in two motor tasks, rotating rod and treadmill, as it was to rats reared under high protein conditions. In Experiment 4 reductions in acoustic startle amplitudes induced by DMT were not as large in malnourished as in well-nourished rats. The hyposensitivity to DMt in protein malnourished rats may reflect a diminished sensitivity of 5-HT receptors resulting from the abnormally high levels of the neurotransmitter. |
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Keywords: | Protein malnutrition Serotonin syndrome Startle response Serotonin receptor sensitivity N,N-dimethyltryptamine |
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