The effects of amphetamine on working memory and locomotor activity in adult rats administered risperidone early in life

•Early-life risperidone elevates locomotor activity during adulthood.•Early-life risperidone enhances amphetamine-elicited hyperactivity.•The elevating effects of risperidone on activity are relatively greater in female rats.•Early-life risperidone impairs working memory at some delays during adulth...

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Veröffentlicht in:Behavioural brain research 2019-04, Vol.362, p.64-70
Hauptverfasser: Bardgett, Mark E., Crane, Casey, Baltes Thompson, Emily C., Cox, Bethanie, Downnen, Tyler
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Early-life risperidone elevates locomotor activity during adulthood.•Early-life risperidone enhances amphetamine-elicited hyperactivity.•The elevating effects of risperidone on activity are relatively greater in female rats.•Early-life risperidone impairs working memory at some delays during adulthood.•Early-life risperidone has no effect on amphetamine-induced memory deficits. Antipsychotic drugs are used to manage symptoms of pediatric psychiatric disorders despite the relative absence of research regarding the long-term effects of these drugs on brain development. Using rats as a model, research has demonstrated that administration of the antipsychotic drug, risperidone, during early postnatal development elevates locomotor activity and sensitivity to the locomotor effects of amphetamine during adulthood. Because risperidone targets neurotransmitter receptors and forebrain regions associated with working memory, the present study determined whether early-life risperidone altered working memory during adulthood and its sensitivity to amphetamine-induced impairment. Female and male rats received subcutaneous (sc) injections of risperidone daily on postnatal days 14-42. Early-life risperidone increased spontaneous locomotor activity and amphetamine-induced hyperactivity during adulthood, although the effects were significantly greater in females. Working memory was tested in an operant-based, delayed non-matching-to-sample task. Early-life risperidone did not affect the percentage of correct choices observed during sessions with 0–8 second delays but impaired performance during sessions with 0–24 second delays. In a subsequent set of tests using 0–24 second delays, amphetamine (0.75 and 1.25 mg/kg, sc) significantly reduced the percentage of correct choices at most delays, but risperidone did not exacerbate this effect. These data suggest that early-life risperidone leads to modest deficits in working memory during adulthood, but does not alter the perturbation of working memory by amphetamine.
ISSN:0166-4328
1872-7549
DOI:10.1016/j.bbr.2018.12.044