Al-Rejaie S, Dar MS. Possible role of mouse cerebellar nitric oxide in the behavioral interaction between chronic intracerebellar nicotine and acute ethanol administration: Observation of cross-tolerance.
Neuroscience 2006;
138:575-85. [PMID:
16413122 DOI:
10.1016/j.neuroscience.2005.11.034]
[Citation(s) in RCA: 16] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.8] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 07/18/2005] [Revised: 11/09/2005] [Accepted: 11/20/2005] [Indexed: 11/24/2022]
Abstract
Many studies have reported cross-tolerance between nicotine and ethanol. Previously we demonstrated that intracerebellar nicotine attenuates ethanol-induced motor impairment. In this study, intracerebellar nicotine (0.625, 2.5, 5 ng; once daily for five days) significantly attenuated ethanol-induced motor impairment in a dose-dependent fashion suggesting the development of cross-tolerance between nicotine and ethanol in male CD-1 mice. Using the same paradigm, intracerebellar nicotine (5 ng) microinfused for 1, 2, 3, 5, 7 days significantly attenuated ethanol-induced motor impairment in all groups except the 1-day treatment group. Cross-tolerance, which developed optimally in 5-day nicotine treatment group, was reversible and detectable up to 40 h post-nicotine microinfusion. Intracerebellar microinfusion of hexamethonium (1 mug once daily for 5 days): (i) did not alter ethanol-induced motor impairment indicating no tonic nicotine receptor involvement; (ii) 10 min prior to daily intracerebellar nicotine treatment virtually abolished the cross-tolerance between nicotine and ethanol indicating nicotinic acetylcholine receptor participation; (iii) when microinfused 10 min after daily intracerebellar nicotine treatment, failed to abolish the cross-tolerance which suggested possible participation of downstream second messenger mechanisms. Chronic intracerebellar microinfusion of nicotine: (i) failed to attenuate acute pentobarbital (25mg/kg i.p.)-induced motor impairment; and (ii) produced no change in normal motor coordination when followed by saline injection. Finally, the cerebellar concentration of total nitric oxide products (nitrite+nitrate; NO(x)); (i) was increased after 5-day intracerebellar nicotine; (ii) was decreased by acute ethanol administration; and (iii) decreased due to acute ethanol administration which was opposed by chronic intracerebellar nicotine treatment. These results support a functional correlation between the cerebellar nitric oxide production and ethanol-induced motor impairment and suggest possible participation of nitric oxide as a factor in the observed cross-tolerance between nicotine and ethanol.
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