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       Original articles (abstract)
       Volume - 47 No. 3: 2003

Indian J Physiol Pharmacol  2003; 311- 317

Enkephalinergic Involvement in substantia nigra in the modulation of hypothalamically-induced predatory attack behavior

S. N. Saha, S. C. Bhatia* and U. Nayar
Department of Physiology,
All India Institute of Medical Sciences,
New Delhi – 110 029

( Received of March 24, 2003 )

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Abstract

The present study was carried out in five cats which did not attack the rats spontaneously. Predatory attack on an anaesthetized rat was elicited by electrical stimulation of lateral hypothalamus at a mean current strength of 650 µA. The attack was accompanied by minimal affective display and culminated in neck biting. Microinfusions of DAME (delta-alanine methionine enkephaline) in 500 ng dose in substantia nigra facilitated the predatory attack and there was a significant reduction in the threshold current strength for affective display as well as somatomotor components. Microinfusions of naloxone, an opioid antagonist in 1.0 µg dose when DAME effect was at its peak reversed the facilitatory effects and the threshold returned to the control levels within 10 minutes of naloxone infusion at the same locus. Microinfusions of naloxone alone in similar dosage completely blocked the predatory attack response as indicated by an increase in the threshold current strength for somatomotor as well as affective display components. The somatomotor were completely inhibited and could not be elicited even when the current strength was increased to 1000 µA. Control injections of saline in similar volumes (0.5 µl) failed to produce any response Microinfusions of naloxone in lower dose (250 ng) failed to produce any blocking effect. These findings indicate that hypothalamically elicited predatory attack is facilitated by enkephalinergic mechanisms operating at the midbrain level.

 

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