Aripiprazole blocks acute self-administration of cocaine and is not self-administered in mice

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RATIONALE: The novel antipsychotic aripiprazole in use for treatment of schizophrenia is a partial agonist at dopamine D(2) receptors with actions at a variety of other receptors as well. Cocaine is believed to exert an important part of its rewarding effect by increasing extracellular levels of dopamine that subsequently act at dopamine D(2) receptors. OBJECTIVES: As a partial agonist, aripiprazole may antagonize effects at D(2) receptors and we accordingly tested whether aripiprazole could antagonize self-administration of cocaine. Because D(2)-like receptor agonists are self-administered, a D(2) receptor partial agonist like aripiprazole might itself be reinforcing. Thus, we also assessed whether mice would acquire self-administration of aripiprazole. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A single session, mouse self-administration procedure was used. RESULTS: Oral pretreatment with aripiprazole dose-dependently decreased cocaine self-administration under a fixed ratio 1 schedule at the peak cocaine dose (0.03 mg/kg/infusion), reaching significance at 0.2 and 0.4 mg/kg of aripiprazole. Using 0.4 mg/kg, aripiprazole decreased rates of cocaine self-administration without shifting the peak of the dose-response function. There was no effect of aripiprazole per se, suggesting that its inhibitory action was due to effects on cocaine self-administration rather than non-specific motor effects. Aripiprazole was not found to be self-administered in the tested dose range (0.0003-0.3 mg/kg/infusion). The three highest doses (0.03, 0.1, and 0.3 mg/kg/infusion) even caused significant decreases in nose-poking activity, possibly due to extrapyramidal side effects. CONCLUSIONS: These data are consistent with a potential role for aripiprazole in treatment of cocaine addiction without abuse potential per se.
Original languageEnglish
JournalPsychopharmacology
Volume199
Issue number1
Pages (from-to)37-46
Number of pages9
ISSN0033-3158
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2008

ID: 5161048