Scopolamine and methylscopolamine differentially affect fixed-consecutive-number performance of male and female Wistar rats.

F van Haaren, A van Hest, T van Hattum
Author Information
  1. F van Haaren: Netherlands Institute for Brain Research, Amsterdam.

Abstract

Male and female Wistar rats were trained on a fixed-consecutive-number schedule in which a response on a food lever was followed by the presentation of reinforcement when at least three, but not more than seven responses had been completed on a work lever. Subjects were treated with different doses of the centrally acting cholinergic antagonist scopolamine hydrobromide or the more peripherally active cholinergic antagonist scopolamine methylbromide (0.08, 0.16 or 0.32 mg/ml/kg) once behavior had stabilized. Scopolamine hydrobromide and scopolamine methylbromide dose-dependently decreased response rates in males and females. Scopolamine methylbromide decreased response rates more than equivalent doses of scopolamine hydrobromide and the rate-suppressant effects of both drugs were more marked in males than in females. Scopolamine hydrobromide dose-dependently decreased response accuracy, but differences between males and females were not observed. Response accuracy also decreased after scopolamine methylbromide, but did not vary as a function of the dose of the drug. The decrease in response accuracy induced by both drugs was attributable to an increase in the percentage of trials with a premature switch from the work lever to the food lever. Both scopolamine hydrobromide and scopolamine methylbromide dose-dependently increased the number of premature switches. Differences between males and females were not observed. Administration of scopolamine hydrobromide and scopolamine methylbromide also decreased the number of obtained reinforcers in a dose-dependent manner. Females obtained significantly fewer reinforcers than males, while scopolamine methylbromide affected the number of obtained reinforcers to a larger extent than scopolamine hydrobromide.

MeSH Term

Animals
Behavior, Animal
Discrimination, Psychological
Female
Male
N-Methylscopolamine
Parasympatholytics
Rats
Rats, Inbred Strains
Reinforcement Schedule
Scopolamine
Scopolamine Derivatives
Sex Factors

Chemicals

Parasympatholytics
Scopolamine Derivatives
Scopolamine
N-Methylscopolamine

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