Phencyclidine (PCP) and dizocilpine (MK801) exert time-dependent effects on the expression of immediate early genes in rat brain
✍ Scribed by Xue-Min Gao; Takeshi Hashimoto; Carol A. Tamminga
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 491 KB
- Volume
- 29
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0887-4476
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✦ Synopsis
The mRNA expression pattern for four different immediate early genes was examined dynamically in rat brain after administration of phencyclidine (PCP; 0.86 or 8.6 mg/kg) or MK801 (0.1 or 1.0 mg/kg). Following each treatment, the expression of cfos, cjun, junB, and zif268 mRNA changed distinctively and dynamically between 1 and 48 hours. cfos mRNA was induced in cortical areas at early times after either dose of PCP or of MK801; the change was especially prominent in cingulate and auditory cortices. zif268 mRNA showed an early (1 hour) activation and a delayed (24-48 hour) suppression after PCP and MK801 in neocortical areas. PCP also caused cjun and junB mRNA induction in cortical areas at early times, with a distribution and time course similar to its effects on cfos mRNA. No alterations in cfos, cjun, or junB mRNA were found in neocortical or hippocampal areas at any delayed time (Ͼ6 hours) after PCP treatment, whereas suppression of zif268 expression was prominent even at 48 hours posttreatment. CPP, a competitive NMDA antagonist, showed a similar pattern of effects on cfos and zif268 mRNA expression. These functional consequences of a PCP-or MK801induced reduction in NMDA-sensitive glutamate transmission may be relevant to an understanding of animal NMDA pharmacology and/or to clinical psychotomimetic side effects of antiglutamatergic treatments.