“…Thus, like lesions of serotonergic cell bodies in the MnR (Kusljic et al, 2005), 5,7-DHT-lesions targeting the dorsal hippocampus are sufficient to unmask functional differences between PCP and the more selective NMDA receptor antagonist, MK-801. Together with data from numerous locomotor activity experiments in 5,7-DHT-lesioned rats (see Adams et al, 2008 for review; Adams et al, 2009), these results indicate that serotonin projections from the MnR to the dorsal hippocampus are involved in the hyperlocomotor mechanism of action of the dissociative anesthetics, PCP and ketamine, as opposed to that of psychostimulants, like amphetamine, and in a manner seemingly independent of their ability to block NMDA receptors, or modulate spatial patterns of behavior. Like other reports (Snell et al, 1988; Hiramatsu et al, 1989; Rothman, 1994; Kapur and Seeman, 2002; Seeman et al, 2005; Seeman and Lasaga, 2005), our findings lend strength to the notion that the schizophrenomimetic effects of PCP and ketamine may not be due to NMDA receptor antagonism alone.…”