The role of genotype in the effects of selective D1 and D2 dopamine agonists and antagonists on behavioural despair (Porsolt's test) was studied. Mice of nine inbred strains showed significant interstrain differences in duration of immobility. The influence of dopaminergic drugs was assessed in six strains characterized by different levels of swimming activity. SKF 38393 (10 mg/kg), an agonist at D1 dopamine receptors, increased swimming activity, while the D1 antagonist SCH 23390 (0.2 and 0.5 mg/kg) reduced it, the effects being genotype dependent. The involvement of D2 dopamine receptors in the regulation of mouse behaviour in the forced swimming test was not so evident; the D2 agonist bromocriptine (10 mg/kg) produced no significant effect. The D2 agonist quinpirole (2.5 mg/kg) increased immobility in the majority of the mouse strains studied, while in CBA mice it resulted in a marked reduction of immobility. The D2 antagonist sulpiride (20 mg/kg) decreased immobility and increased active swimming only in two strains. The present results suggest a different role for D1 and D2 dopamine receptors in the regulation of swimming in the mouse.
Monoamine oxidase A (MAO A) degrades serotonin, dopamine and noradrenaline, factors critically involved in the regulation of aggression. Different kinds of aggression were investigated in Tg8, a transgenic mouse strain lacking a functional MAO A gene. MAO A-deficient mice differ from wild-type C3H/HeJ (C3H) in terms of showing higher territorial, predatory and isolationinduced aggression. Tg8 demonstrated shorter latencies to cricket killing and to the first attack after 6 weeks isolation than C3H mice. In the resident-intruder paradigm, MAO A-lacking mice were more aggressive than C3H when tested as intruders. In contrast to C3H, attack in Tg8 mice did not depend on different aggressiveness of intruders of BALB/c, A/Sn and C3H strains. Tg8 mice displayed no increase in aggression but demonstrated reduced social investigation towards anesthetized, as well as towards juvenile BALB/c males. Thus, MAO A deficiency in Tg8 mice is accompanied by increased expression of different kinds of aggression, as well as by disruption of normal pattern of social interaction. Aggr. Behav. 33:1-6, 2007. r
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