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Vol. 286, Issue 2, 794-805, August 1998
Department of Neurobiology and Anatomy, University of Rochester
Medical School, Rochester, New York
To examine the assertion that changes in nucleus accumbens (NAC)
dopamine (DA) activity serve as a mechanism of lead (Pb)-induced disruption of fixed interval (FI) schedule-controlled behavior, the
effects of intra-NAC administration of the irreversible DA antagonist
EEDQ (N-ethoxycarbonyl-2-ethoxy-1,2-dihyroquinoline) and of dopamine
itself on FI performance were compared in rats that had been
chronically exposed to 0, 50 or 500 ppm Pb acetate in drinking water
from weaning. Pb exposure per se (500 ppm), as in past
studies, increased FI response rates, primarily by shortening
interresponse times. Although DA, which produced rate-dependent effects, increased FI rates at low doses in the 0 and 50 ppm groups, it
did so by decreasing postreinforcement pause times. All DA doses
decreased rates in the 500 ppm group. In contrast, the DA antagonist
EEDQ suppressed FI response rates, effects that were not strongly rate
dependent, by increasing both postreinforcement pause values and mean
interresponse times. Pb exposure (500 ppm) delayed the recovery of
response rates to control levels at the highest EEDQ dose, raising the
possibility of a delay in receptor production rate. Collectively, these
data suggest that NAC DA activity may be an important modulator of FI
response rates. Enhanced NAC DA activity may contribute to
Pb-associated increases in FI rates and may underlie the differential
response of control and 500 ppm Pb-treated groups to intra-NAC DA
administration. The different processes by which DA and Pb increase FI
rates, however, suggests that additional mechanisms are operative in
the case of Pb.