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Canna~Fangled Abstracts

Differential effects of CB1 receptor agonism in behavioural tests of unconditioned and conditioned fear in adult male rats.

By November 12, 2014No Comments
2014 Nov 12;279C:9-16. doi: 10.1016/j.bbr.2014.11.012. [Epub ahead of print]

pm1Differential effects of CB1 receptor agonism in behavioural tests of unconditioned and conditioned fear in adult male rats.

Abstract

We investigated the effects of the highly selective CB1 receptor agonist ACEA and the CB1 receptor antagonist/inverse agonist AM251 on two behavioural tests of unconditioned fear, the elevated plus maze (EPM) and open field test (OFT), as well as on the recall and extinction of a conditioned auditory fear. Both ACEA and AM251 increased anxiety-like behaviour in the EPM and OFT. There was no effect of either drug on recall of the conditioned fear, and ACEA enhanced and AM251 impaired fear extinction. Further, though both the low (0.1mg/kg) and high (0.5mg/kg) dose of ACEA facilitated fear extinction, the low dose attenuated, and the high dose potentiated, fear induced corticosterone release suggesting independent effects of the drug on fear and stress responses. Although the extent to which cannabinoids are anxiogenic or anxiolytic has been proposed to be dose-dependent, these results indicate that the same dose has differential effects across tasks, likely based in differences in sensitivities of CB1 receptors to the agonist in the neural regions subserving unconditioned and conditioned fear.
Copyright © 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

KEYWORDS:

CB1 receptor agonism; CB1 receptor antagonism; Conditioned fear; Physiological stress; Unconditioned fear

PMID:

 25446756
[PubMed – as supplied by publisher]twin memes II