Background
Subjective effects related to cocaine abuse are primarily mediated by blockade of the dopamine (DA) transporter (DAT). The present study assessed the hypothesis that different conformational equilibria of the DAT regulate differences in extracellular DA induced by structurally diverse DA uptake inhibitors (DUI) and their cocaine-like subjective effects.
Methods
The relationship between cocaine-like subjective effects and stimulation of mesolimbic-DA levels by standard-DUIs (cocaine, methylphenidate, WIN35,428), and atypical-DUIs (benztropine analogs: AHN1-055, AHN2-005, JHW-007) was investigated using cocaine-discrimination and DA-microdialysis procedures in rats.
Results
All drugs stimulated DA-levels showing different time-courses and maximal effects. Standard-DUIs, which preferentially bind to the outward-facing DAT-conformation, fully substituted for cocaine, consistently producing those subjective effects at DA levels of 100-125% over basal values, regardless of dose or pretreatment time. The atypical-DUIs, with DAT binding minimally affected by DAT conformation, produced inconsistent cocaine-like subjective effects. Full effects were obtained, if at all, only at a few doses and pretreatment times, and at DA-levels 600-700% greater than basal values. Importantly, the linear, time-independent, relationship between cocaine-like subjective effects and stimulation of DA-levels, obtained with standard DUIs was not obtained with the atypical-DUIs.
Conclusions
These results suggest a time-related desensitization process underlying the reduced cocaine subjective effects of atypical-DUIs that may be differentially induced by the binding modalities identified using molecular approaches. Since the DAT is the target of several drugs for treating neuropsychiatric disorders, such as ADHD, these results help to identify safe and effective medications with minimal cocaine-like subjective effects that contribute to abuse liability.