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  • Title: Effects of NMDA receptor antagonists in squirrel monkeys trained to discriminate the competitive NMDA receptor antagonist NPC 12626 from saline.
    Author: Gold LH, Balster RL.
    Journal: Eur J Pharmacol; 1993 Jan 19; 230(3):285-92. PubMed ID: 8095022.
    Abstract:
    Because excitatory amino acids have been implicated in several physiological phenomena, antagonists of excitatory amino acid function may have significant therapeutic potential as anticonvulsants, neuroprotectants and anxiolytics. Drug discrimination procedures in animals have proven useful to compare and contrast the behavioral effects of site-selective NMDA antagonists. In the only previous study using a competitive NMDA antagonist as a training drug, rats were trained to discriminate NPC 12626 (2-amino-4,5-(1,2-cyclohexyl)-7-phosphonohepatanoic acid) from nondrug. The major goal of the present study was to establish and characterize a nonhuman primate model of NPC 12626 discrimination. Adult male squirrel monkeys were trained to discriminate NPC 12626 from saline under a two-lever fixed ratio-30 schedule of food reinforcement. The monkeys required between 80 and 120 training sessions to acquire this discrimination after the training dose had been raised from 3 to 20 mg/kg i.m. The competitive NMDA antagonists CGP 37849 (D,L-(E)-2-amino-4-methyl-5- phosphono-3-pentanoic acid) and CPPene (D-3-(2-carboxypiperazin-4-yl)-1-propenyl-1-phosphonic acid) substituted completely for NPC 12626, while the potent noncompetitive NMDA antagonist, dizocilpine (MK-801), did not. These results reflect a profile of discriminative stimulus effects which support that observed in rats and establish a primate model for use in further study of the behavioral effects of the competitive NMDA antagonists.
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