Environmental stimuli that are reliably associated with the effects of many abused drugs, especially stimulants such as cocaine, can produce craving and relapse in abstinent human substance abusers. In animals, such cues can induce and maintain drug-seeking behaviour and also reinstate drug-seeking after extinction. Reducing the motivational effects of drug-related cues might therefore be useful in the treatment of addiction. Converging pharmacological, human post-mortem and genetic studies implicate the dopamine D3 receptor in drug addiction. Here we have designed BP 897, the first D3-receptor-selective agonist, as assessed in vitro with recombinant receptors and in vivo with mice bearing disrupted D3-receptor genes. BP 897 is a partial agonist in vitro and acts in vivo as either an agonist or an antagonist. We show that BP 897 inhibits cocaine-seeking behaviour that depends upon the presentation of drug-associated cues, without having any intrinsic, primary rewarding effects. Our data indicate that compounds like BP 897 could be used for reducing the drug craving and vulnerability to relapse that are elicited by drug-associated environmental stimuli.
Drugs of abuse, including, nicotine have been shown to enhance brain reward functions in the mesocortico-limbic dopamine (DA) system in general, and the nucleus accumbens in particular. The latter occupies a prominent position in the ventral striatum and expresses a high density of DA D 3 receptors. As such, the present study aimed at investigating the effect of the selective D 3 receptor antagonist SB-277011-A on both the stable maintenance of intravenous nicotine self-administration and nicotine-triggered relapse to nicotine-seeking behavior in the rat. SB-277011-A (3-10 mg/kg i.p.) significantly reduced reinstatement of nicotine-seeking behavior without affecting nicotine self-administration per se. These results suggest that DA D 3 receptors are involved in the reinstatement of nicotine-seeking behavior independently of any interaction with the primary reinforcing effects of nicotine itself. These findings point toward the potential use of selective DA D 3 receptor antagonists for the pharmacotherapeutic management of relapse to drug-seeking behaviors.
The discovery of new highly potent and selective dopamine D3 receptor antagonists has recently permitted characterization of the role of the dopamine D3 receptor in a wide range of preclinical animal models. A novel series of 1,2,4-triazol-3-yl-thiopropyl-tetrahydrobenzazepines demonstrating a high level of D3 affinity and selectivity with an excellent pharmacokinetic profile is reported here. In particular, the pyrazolyl derivative 35 showed good oral bioavailability and brain penetration associated with high potency and selectivity in vitro. In vivo characterization of 35 confirmed that this compound blocks the expression of nicotine- and cocaine-conditioned place preference in the rat, prevents nicotine-triggered reinstatement of nicotine-seeking behavior in the rat, reduces oral operant alcohol self-administration in the mouse, increases extracellular levels of acetylcholine in the rat medial prefrontal cortex, and potentiates the amplitude of the relative cerebral blood volume response to d-amphetamine in a regionally specific manner in the rat brain.
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