Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8350140 | Pharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior | 2017 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Nutritive (e.g., sucrose) and non-nutritive (e.g., saccharin) sweeteners stimulate intake in inbred mouse strains. BALB/c, SWR and C57BL/6 mice differ in the ability of dopamine (DA) D1 (SCH23390) and opioid (naltrexone) receptor antagonism to alter sucrose intake. Whereas SCH23390 comparably reduced cumulative sucrose intake in all three strains, naltrexone reduced cumulative sucrose intake maximally in C57/BL/6 mice, in intermediate fashion in BALB/c mice, but not in SWR mice. Whereas cumulative saccharin intake was reduced by DA D1 receptor antagonism in BALB/c and SWR mice, naltrexone was more potent in SWR relative to BALB/c mice. The present study first examined whether SCH23390 (50-1600Â nmol/kg) and naltrexone (0.01-5Â mg/kg) altered saccharin intake in C57BL/6 mice. Given that scopolamine (SCOP), a muscarinic cholinergic receptor antagonist, reduces sweet intake in outbred rats, a second experiment examined whether SCOP (0.1-10Â mg/kg) altered 0.2% saccharin and 10% sucrose intakes in BALB/c, SWR and C57BL/6 mice. Cumulative saccharin intake was significantly reduced by SCH23390 (200-1600Â nmol/kg; ID40Â =Â 175Â nmol/kg) and naltrexone (0.1-5Â mg/kg; ID40Â >Â 5Â mg/kg) in C57BL/6 mice. Cumulative sucrose intake was significantly reduced following SCOP in C57BL/6 (0.1-10Â mg/kg; ID40Â =Â 2.32Â mg/kg) and BALB/c (2.5-10Â mg/kg; ID40Â =Â 0.52Â mg/kg) mice. In contrast, SWR mice (ID40Â =Â 41.61Â mg/kg) only displayed transient (15Â min) reductions in sucrose intake following SCOP (2.5-10Â mg/kg). Cumulative saccharin intake was significantly reduced following SCOP in C57BL/6 and BALB/c mice (0.1-10Â mg/kg; ID40Â <Â 0.1Â mg/kg). In contrast, SWR mice (ID40Â =Â 2.28Â mg/kg) displayed smaller significant reductions in saccharin intake following SCOP (0.1-10Â mg/kg). These data indicate that although both nutritive and non-nutritive sweet intakes are governed by muscarinic cholinergic receptor signaling, this process is subject to murine genetic variance with greater sensitivity observed in C57BL/6 and BALB/c relative to SWR inbred mouse strains.
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Authors
Faye Bourie, Kerstin Olsson, Ben Iskhakov, Agata Buras, Gabriela Fazilov, Merna Shenouda, Julia Zhezherya, Richard J. Bodnar,