Regulatory peptides
-
Regulatory peptides · Nov 1987
Pressor, tachycardic and feeding responses in conscious rats following i.c.v. administration of dynorphin. Central blockade by opiate and alpha 1-receptor antagonists.
Experiments were designed to determine the hemodynamic responses of conscious, unrestrained rats given intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) injections of dynorphin A-(1-13) and the possible central receptor mechanisms mediating those changes. Male Sprague-Dawley rats (300 gb. wt.) received i.c.v. injections (by gravity flow in a total volume of 3 or 5 microliter) of control solutions of sterile saline (SS) or dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) or 1.5, 3.0 or 6.1 nmol of dynorphin A-(1-13). Blood pressure and heart rate changes were monitored over 2 h after administration; as well, feeding activity was visually assessed and scored over this period. ⋯ I.c.v. pretreatment studies indicated that naloxone HCl (12.2 nmol), phentolamine HCl (12.2 nmol) and prazosin HCl (6.1 nmol) blocked the pressor response, tachycardia as well as feeding activity of rats subsequently given dynorphin. The results suggest the pressor and tachycardic effects of conscious rats following i.c.v. dynorphin administration may, in part, be due to behavioral activation (feeding). As well, these data indicate that both opioid as well as alpha 1-adrenergic receptors within the CNS are involved in mediating the pressor, tachycardic and feeding responses of conscious rats given i.c.v. injections of dynorphin A.