Previous studies demonstrated that sigma-receptor (σR) antagonists alone fail to alter cocaine self-administration despite blocking various other effects of cocaine. However, σR antagonists when combined with dopamine transporter (DAT) inhibitors substantially decrease cocaine selfadministration. To better understand the effects of this combination, the present study examined the effects of σR antagonist and DAT inhibitor combinations in male rats discriminating cocaine (10 mg/kg, i.p.) from saline injections. The DAT inhibitors alone (WIN 35,428 and methylphenidate) at low (0.1 mg/kg) doses that were minimally active, failed to shift the doseeffect function for discriminative-stimulus effects of cocaine to the left more than two-fold. At 0.32 mg/kg the DAT inhibitors alone shifted the cocaine dose-effect function leftward 24-or 6.6fold, respectively. The σR antagonists (BD1008, BD1047, and BD1063) failed to fully substitute for cocaine, though BD1008 and BD1047 substituted partially. At 10 mg/kg, BD1008, BD1047, or BD1063 alone shifted the cocaine dose-effect function leftward less than 6.0-fold.In combination with 0.1 mg/kg WIN 35,428, the 10 mg/kg doses of σR antagonists shifted the cocaine dose-effect function from 12.3 to 36.7-fold leftward, and with 0.32 mg/kg WIN 35,428 from 14.3 to 440-fold leftward. In combination with 0.1 mg/kg methylphenidate, those σR