Discriminative stimulus effects of the nonpeptidic delta-opioid agonist SNC80 in rhesus monkeys.

Journal: The Journal Of Pharmacology And Experimental Therapeutics
Published:
Abstract

Five rhesus monkeys were trained to discriminate the nonpeptidic, delta-opioid agonist SNC80 (0.32 mg/kg i.m.) from saline by using a food-reinforced drug-discrimination procedure. Cumulative doses of SNC80 produced a dose-dependent increase in SNC80-appropriate responding and a dose-dependent decrease in response rate. In time-course studies, peak effects of the training dose of SNC80 were observed after 15 min, and these effects diminished over 240 min. In substitution studies, other piperazinyl benzamide delta agonists (SNC86, SNC162, and SNC243A) substituted for SNC80 with relative potencies similar those of SNC80. However, SNC67, the (-)-enantiomer of SNC80, did not occasion SNC80-appropriate responding up to a dose (32.0 mg/kg) that produced convulsions in one monkey. The mu agonists morphine and fentanyl and the kappa agonists U-50,488 and enadoline failed to substitute for SNC80 up to doses that eliminated responding. Two nonopioids (the N-methyl-D-aspartate antagonist ketamine and the monoamine reuptake inhibitor cocaine) also produced primarily saline-appropriate responding. Both the discriminative stimulus and rate-decreasing effects of SNC80 were antagonized by the delta-selective antagonist naltrindole (0.01-1.0 mg/kg) but not by doses of the opioid antagonist quadazocine (0.1-1.0 mg/kg) that block the effects of mu and kappa agonists. These data suggest that the discriminative stimulus effects of SNC80 are mediated by delta-opioid receptors and that the discriminative stimulus effects of delta opioids in primates can be differentiated from the effects of other opioid and nonopioid compounds.

Authors
M Brandt, S Negus, N Mello, M Furness, X Zhang, K Rice