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Title: Effect on hypothalamic self-stimulation of the novel beta-carbolines ZK 93 426 (a benzodiazepine receptor antagonist) and ZK 91 296 (a putative partial agonist). Author: Herberg LJ, Montgomery AM, File SE, Pellow S, Stephens DN. Journal: J Neural Transm; 1986; 66(2):75-84. PubMed ID: 3018143. Abstract: Low doses (300 micrograms/kg-1.0 mg/kg) of the novel beta-carboline, ZK 91 296, a putative agonist at the benzodiazepine receptor, produced a significant increase in the rate of variable-interval self-stimulation responding, similar to that found with typical benzodiazepines. This effect was blocked by simultaneous administration of the specific benzodiazepine-receptor antagonists Ro 15-1788 (2.0 mg/kg), and ZK 93 426 (10 mg/kg). Neither antagonist, ZK 93 426 (100 micrograms/kg-10 mg/kg) or Ro 15-1788 (2.0 mg/kg), had any effect on self-stimulation when given alone. Unlike all benzodiazepine-receptor agonists previously tested, higher doses of ZK 91 296 did not depress self-stimulation response rates, even at a dose-level 100 times greater than the maximally stimulant dose. It is uncertain why ZK 91 296 lacks depressant effects: available evidence does not conclusively favour any single current explanation, but is consistent with it acting as a "partial" agonist.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]