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D-sub-1 dopamine receptor mediation of social and nonsocial emotional reactivity in mice: Effects of housing and strain difference in motor activity.
25
Citations
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References
1997
Year
NeurotransmitterAffective NeuroscienceNonsocial Emotional ReactivityPsychologySocial SciencesSocial NeuroscienceMotor ActivitySocial ReactivityStrain DifferenceBehavioral SciencesBehavioral NeuroscienceBehavioral PharmacologyNeuropharmacologyNervous SystemDopaminePharmacologyBehavioural PhysiologyNeurobiological MechanismIsolation HousingNeurophysiologySocial BehaviorPhysiologyNeuroscienceStationary ReactivityCentral Nervous SystemMedicineEmotion
The study examined the effects of isolation housing and the role of D1 dopamine receptors on isolation-induced social and nonsocial (acoustic startle) reactivity in mice high (C57BL/6) and low (A) in motor activity. Isolation housing had no effect on acoustic startle but increased strain-specific forms of social reactivity. The D1 agonist dihydrexidine (DHX) increased acoustic startle in isolated mice of both strains, but this effect was more pronounced in C57BL/6 mice. In this strain, DHX and the D1 agonist SKF-81297 increased locomotor forms of social reactivity (e.g., escape, jump), whereas the D1 antagonist SCH-23390 increased stationary reactivity (e.g., freezing). In A mice, DHX and SKF-81297 increased and decreased stationary reactivity, respectively, whereas SCH-23390 had no effect on these behaviors. Administration of SKF-81297 after pretreatment with SCH-23390 or the D2 antagonist sulpiride confirmed the importance of D1 receptors in mediating specific forms of social reactivity in C57BL/6 mice. These results suggest an important relationship between social reactivity and motor activity and an important, albeit strain-dependent, role for D1 receptors in mediating specific emotional behaviors.
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