Three different behavioral measures were used to assess the effects of abrupt cessation of chronic nicotine treatment. Nicotine (0, 3, or 6 mg/kg per day) was continuously administered for 12 days in rats by surgically implanting Alzet osmotic mini-pumps subcutaneously. Experiment 1 employed a light/dark discrimination task. There were no significant effects on number of responses or percent correct responding either during nicotine administration, or following cessation of nicotine. Experiment 2 examined ambulatory (locomotor) and nonambulatory activity. Chronic nicotine administration produced significant dose-dependent increases in both ambulatory and nonambulatory activity during the first 3 days of exposure. However, no significant alterations were seen in activity levels following nicotine cessation. Experiment 3 examined sensorimotor reactivity using the auditory startle response. During nicotine withdrawal, significant increases were seen in startle amplitude in both nicotine groups for 4 days. Nicotine (0.4 mg/kg, IP) administered before startle testing during the withdrawal phase attenuated the increased reactivity seen during nicotine cessation. These studies indicate that 1) rats display increased sensorimotor reactivity after cessation of chronic nicotine exposure, and 2) the expression of nicotine dependence and withdrawal is dependent on the behavioral task employed.
The protein kinase inhibitor, staurosporine, was examined for hemodynamic actions in conscious rats and for its effects on isolated vascular smooth muscle. In conscious normotensive rats, staurosporine, 0.1 to 1.0 mg/kg intravenous, produced a dose-related decrease in blood pressure. Doses of 0.1 and 0.5 mg/kg produced reflex tachycardia, while heart rate decreased following 1.0 mg/kg. Higher doses of staurosporine (5 and 10 mg/kg), although not significantly altering heart rate, caused a precipitous drop in blood pressure and all rats died within 48 hours of treatment. Spontaneously hypertensive rats were significantly more sensitive than normotensive rats to the blood pressure lowering effects of staurosporine. The depressor activity of staurosporine was also observed in cord-stimulated pithed rats indicating that hypotension is a peripherally- rather than centrally-mediated effect of staurosporine. In ring preparations of rat thoracic aorta, staurosporine (3 nM to 0.1 mM) produced a concentration-dependent inhibition of serotonin-induced contraction, consistent with its ability to lower blood pressure by an effect at a peripheral vascular site. These results provide the first documentation of the potent cardiovascular activity of staurosporine in the conscious rat and support the contention that protein kinases, in particular protein kinase C, may be important in the regulation of vascular tone.
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