First Author | Karasinska JM | Year | 2000 |
Journal | Eur J Pharmacol | Volume | 399 |
Issue | 2-3 | Pages | 171-81 |
PubMed ID | 10884517 | Mgi Jnum | J:102600 |
Mgi Id | MGI:3607822 | Doi | 10.1016/s0014-2999(00)00347-2 |
Citation | Karasinska JM, et al. (2000) Modification of dopamine D(1) receptor knockout phenotype in mice lacking both dopamine D(1) and D(3) receptors. Eur J Pharmacol 399(2-3):171-81 |
abstractText | Experimental evidence suggests that dopamine D(1) and D(3) receptors may interact in an opposing or synergistic fashion. To investigate interactions between both receptors in behaviour, we have used dopamine D(1) and D(3) receptor knockout mice to generate mice lacking both receptors. D(1)(-/-)D(3)(-/-) mice were viable, fertile and showed no gross morphological abnormalities. In an open field, they exhibited lower activity than wild-type, D(1)(-/-) and D(3)(-/-) mice. D(1)(-/-)D(3)(-/-) mice performed equally poorly in the rotarod and Morris water maze tasks as their D(1)(-/-) littermates. Basal locomotor activity and anxiety-like behaviour were normal in D(1)(-/-)D(3)(-/-) mice. Combined deletion of both receptors abolished the exploratory hyperactivity and anxiolytic-like behaviour of dopamine D(3) receptor mutant phenotype and further attenuated the low exploratory phenotype of D(1)(-/-) mice. These results imply an interaction of both receptors in the expression of exploratory behaviour in a novel environment, and the need for the presence of intact dopamine D(1) receptor for the expression of certain behaviours manifested in dopamine D(3) receptor mutant phenotype. In addition, dopamine D(1) receptor, but not dopamine D(3) receptor, is involved in the ability to perform on the rotarod and spatial learning. |