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Journal Article

Citation

Galanopoulos A, Polissidis A, Papadopoulou-Daifoti Z, Nomikos GG, Antoniou K. Behav. Brain Res. 2011; 224(1): 65-72.

Affiliation

Department of Pharmacology, Medical School, University of Ioannina, 45110 Ioannina, Greece; Department of Pharmacology, Medical School, University of Athens, 11527 Athens, Greece.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2011, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.bbr.2011.05.018

PMID

21645556

Abstract

Endocannabinoids are involved in excitatory neurotransmission initiated by glutamate and aspartate. The aim of the present study was to investigate the effects of the cannabinoid agonists, Δ(9)-THC and WIN55,212-2, on tissue (prefrontal cortex, dorsal striatum, nucleus accumbens, hippocampus, amygdala and hypothalamus) levels of glutamate and aspartate in two rat phenotypes, high responders (HR) and low responders (LR), differentiated according to their response to a novel environment. HR displayed increased motor activity but no difference in basal levels of glutamate and aspartate as compared to LR. Both cannabinoids increased ambulatory activity at the low doses, this effect was observed only in HR following Δ(9)-THC, but in both HR and LR following WIN55,212-2. The cannabinoids primarily increased glutamate levels in the prefrontal cortex, dorsal striatum, nucleus accumbens and hippocampus, while the high dose of WIN55,212-2 decreased glutamate levels in the amygdala and both doses in the hypothalamus; these effects appeared overall more pronounced in HR. In contrast, the cannabinoids primarily decreased aspartate levels in all brain regions, except in the dorsal striatum, where an increase was seen after both doses of Δ(9)-THC and WIN55,212-2 as well as in the nucleus accumbens after the low dose of Δ(9)-THC in HR; these effects also appeared overall more pronounced in HR. Present results show that exogenous cannabinoids affect tissue levels of glutamate and aspartate in a phenotype-, compound-, dose-, and brain region-dependent manner.


Language: en

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