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Interactions between dopamine transporter and cannabinoid receptor ligands in rhesus monkeys
Authors:David R. Schulze  F. Ivy Carroll  Lance R. McMahon
Affiliation:Department of Pharmacology, The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, 7703 Floyd Curl Drive, San Antonio, TX 78229-3900, USA.
Abstract:

Rationale

??9-tetrahydrocannabinol (??9-THC) modifies dopamine efflux. However, the extent to which cannabinoid and dopamine drugs modify each other??s behavioral effects has not been fully established.

Objectives

This study examined dopamine releasers and/or transport inhibitors alone and in combination with cannabinoids in two drug discrimination assays.

Methods

Experimentally and pharmacologically experienced rhesus monkeys (n?=?5) discriminated ??9-THC (0.1?mg/kg i.v.) from vehicle while responding under a fixed ratio 5 schedule of stimulus-shock termination. A separate group (n?=?6) of monkeys responded under the same schedule, received daily ??9-THC (1?mg/kg/12?h?s.c.), and discriminated the cannabinoid antagonist rimonabant (1?mg/kg i.v.), i.e., cannabinoid withdrawal, from vehicle. A sign of withdrawal sign (head shaking) was examined in monkeys receiving ??9-THC daily.

Results

Rimonabant antagonized the ??9-THC discriminative stimulus and a dose of ??9-THC greater than the daily treatment attenuated the rimonabant discriminative stimulus. In monkeys discriminating ??9-THC, the dopamine transporter ligands cocaine, amphetamine, bupropion, RTI 113, and RTI 177 produced a maximum of 2% responding on the drug lever and blocked the discriminative stimulus effects of ??9-THC. In ??9-THC treated monkeys discriminating rimonabant, the dopamine transporter ligands partially substituted for and increased the potency of rimonabant to produce discriminative stimulus effects. The dopamine antagonist haloperidol enhanced the ??9-THC discriminative stimulus without significantly modifying the rimonabant discriminative stimulus. Imipramine and desipramine, which have low affinity for dopamine transporters, were less effective in modifying either the ??9-THC or rimonabant discriminations. The dopamine transporter ligands and haloperidol attenuated head shaking, whereas imipramine and desipramine did not.

Conclusions

Dopamine release and/or inhibition of dopamine transport blocks detection of ??9-THC and is potentially the mechanism by which some therapeutics (e.g., bupropion) reduce the subjective effects of marijuana and enhance the subjective effects of marijuana withdrawal.
Keywords:
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