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Effect of Bupropion on Nicotine Self-Administration in Rats

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Rauhut, Anthony S., Nicole Neugebauer, Linda P. Dwoskin, and Michael T. Bardo. Effect of Bupropion on Nicotine Self-Administration in Rats. Psychopharmacology 169, no. 1 (2003): 1-9.

Rationale and objective: The mechanisms underlying the therapeutic efficacy of bupropion as a smoking cessation agent are unknown. Bupropion inhibits monoamine uptake as well as neuronal nicotinic receptor (nAChR) function. The present study compared effects of bupropion on nicotine self-administration to those of other stimulant drugs (methamphetamine and apomorphine) that lack nAChR activity in order to determine its mechanism of action. To determine the specificity of bupropion-induced changes in nicotine self-administration, the ability of bupropion to alter sucrose-maintained responding or amphetamine self-administration was determined. Methods: In nicotine and amphetamine self-administration and sucrose-maintained responding experiments, rats responded for nicotine (0.01 or 0.02 mg/kg per infusion, IV), amphetamine (0.2 mg/kg per infusion, IV) and sucrose pellets (45 mg), respectively, on a fixed ratio 5 schedule. Once responding stabilized, rats were pretreated 15 min before the session with bupropion (1–78 mg/kg) or vehicle. The ability of methamphetamine (0.3–3 mg/kg) or apomorphine (0.01–0.2 mg/kg) to alter responding for nicotine (0.02 mg/kg per infusion, IV) was determined. Results: Bupropion produced a biphasic dose-response pattern at both nicotine infusion doses, increasing infusions at low bupropion doses and decreasing infusions at high bupropion doses. Methamphetamine produced a similar biphasic pattern, whereas apomorphine only decreased nicotine infusions at high doses. Bupropion dose-dependently decreased responding for sucrose and amphetamine. Conclusions: These results suggest that high bupropion doses decrease responding nonspecifically; whereas low bupropion doses selectively increase responding for nicotine. The increase in nicotine self-administration is likely due to inhibition of dopamine and norepinephrine transporters, combined with inhibition of nAChRs.

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MLA citation style (9th ed.)

Neugebauer, Nicole, et al. Effect of Bupropion On Nicotine Self-administration In Rats. . 2003. dickinson.hykucommons.org/concern/generic_works/43cf6555-47a2-4d9d-b507-fca380cfd8db.

APA citation style (7th ed.)

N. Nicole, R. A. S, B. M. T, & D. L. P. (2003). Effect of Bupropion on Nicotine Self-Administration in Rats. https://dickinson.hykucommons.org/concern/generic_works/43cf6555-47a2-4d9d-b507-fca380cfd8db

Chicago citation style (CMOS 17, author-date)

Neugebauer, Nicole, Rauhut, Anthony S., Bardo, Michael T., and Dwoskin, Linda P.. Effect of Bupropion On Nicotine Self-Administration In Rats. 2003. https://dickinson.hykucommons.org/concern/generic_works/43cf6555-47a2-4d9d-b507-fca380cfd8db.

Note: These citations are programmatically generated and may be incomplete.

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