- Differential modulation of behavioral effects of cocaine by low- and high-efficacy D1 agonists.
Differential modulation of behavioral effects of cocaine by low- and high-efficacy D1 agonists.
Dopamine D1 agonists differing in efficacy with respect to stimulation of adenylate cyclase activity and other in vitro and in vivo criteria were evaluated for their capacity to modulate the behavioral effects of cocaine in squirrel monkeys. Monkeys were trained either to respond on a fixed-ratio schedule in which lever pressing terminated a stimulus associated with electric shock or to discriminate cocaine from vehicle using a two-lever drug-discrimination procedure. When administered in combination with cocaine, D1 agonists displaying relatively low efficacy (SKF 38393, SKF 75670) attenuated both the rate-altering effects of cocaine on fixed-ratio responding and the discriminative-stimulus effects of cocaine, resulting in overall rightward shifts of the cocaine dose-response functions. Maximal attenuation of the behavioral effects of cocaine by the D1 partial agonists was comparable to that produced by the D1 antagonist SCH 39166. In contrast, D1 agonists displaying relatively high efficacy (SKF 81297, SKF 82958, SKF 83189) either had little effect on or accentuated the rate-altering and discriminative-stimulus effects of cocaine. The results show that D1 partial agonists can act as functional cocaine antagonists and may be viable candidate medications for the management of cocaine addiction.