Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.4.16.2 (PCP)
3,761 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Four groups of five food-deprived hooded Long-Evans rats were injected subcutaneously with saline (vehicle) or 2, 4 or 8 mg phencyclidine (PCP) hydrochloride/kg fifteen minutes before being placed for the first time into operant chambers modified to detect exploratory behaviors. Rearing was found to be more sensitive to disruption by phencyclidine than was unconditioned level touching (a measure of floor-level exploratory activities). In an autoshaping session immediately following, the group of animals given the low dose of PCP made as many lever-touch responses as the group given saline, but consumed fewer of the food pellets delivered. In addition, none of the animals in the low-dose group showed within-session shortening of the latency to respond which was observed in four of five control animals. The two other groups given higher doses of PCP demonstrated dose-related decrements in responding as well as a reduction in food pellet consumption during the first session of autoshaping. Over the next two daily autoshaping sessions, performance improved in those groups initially suppressed. Performance converged in all group by the third autoshaping session.
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PMID:Phencyclidine retards autoshaping at a dose which does not suppress the required response. 711 54

A sensitive and specific method has been developed for the quantitative analysis of phencyclidine (PCP) in pigmented and nonpigmented rat hair. After the addition of PCP-d5 as the internal standard, hair samples (10 mg) were digested overnight in 1N NaOH at 30 degrees C. Digested solutions were then extracted using a solid-phase procedure with Bond Elut CertifyTM extraction columns. Reconstituted extracts were analyzed on a Finnigan ion trap (MagnumTM) mass spectrometer in the electron ionization mode using helium as the carrier gas, and a DB-5 MS (30 m x 0.25-mm i.d.; 25-microns film thickness) capillary column. The assay is linear from 0.1 to 50 ng/mg with a correlation coefficient of > 0.99 and is capable of detecting 25 pg of PCP on column. The accuracy of this assay was estimated using fortified hair standards at PCP concentrations of 0.5 and 10 ng/mg. Intra-assay coefficients of variation were determined to be less than 6% at 0.5, 2, and 10 ng/mg. Interassay coefficients of variation were determined to be less than 15% at 0.5, 2, and 10 ng/mg. The method has been used to evaluate PCP incorporation into Long-Evans rat hair but could also be used to evaluate the incorporation of PCP into human hair. Male rats were shaved prior to dosing such that both pigmented and nonpigmented hair was collected. Animals were administered 12 mg/kg PCP by intraperitoneal injection daily for five days. Fourteen days after the first dose, pigmented and nonpigmented hair were collected and analyzed for PCP. The mean plus or minus the standard error of the mean (n = 5) concentrations of PCP in pigmented and nonpigmented hair were 14.33 +/- 1.43 ng/mg of hair and 0.47 +/- 0.04 ng/mg of hair, respectively. This method is also being used to evaluate PCP as a model xenobiotic for studies of the incorporation of xenobiotics into hair.
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PMID:Quantitative determination of phencyclidine in pigmented and nonpigmented hair by ion-trap mass spectrometry. 888 69

The current research assessed the role of the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor in developmental synaptic plasticity. This was accomplished by quantitative analysis of synaptic number and morphology following pharmacological manipulation of NMDA receptor activity using either the competitive antagonist 2-amino-5-phosphonovaleric acid (APV) or the noncompetitive antagonist phencyclidine (PCP). In the first group, 15-day-old male Long-Evans rats were implanted with osmotic minipumps, which administered 50 mM APV or vehicle at a rate of 0.5 microliter per h into the subjects' occipital cortex for 14 days. At age 30 days (P30), the rats were sacrificed and their occipital neocortices were examined. A second group of rats was given subcutaneous injections of 10 mg/kg PCP or vehicle once daily beginning on P5 for a period of 15 days, and was sacrificed on P20. To determine the effects following withdrawal from long-term NMDA antagonism, a third group of animals was given the same PCP injection routine until P20, but was sacrificed on P21, P26, P36, and P56. Developmental administration of APV was associated with a decreased molecular layer depth and estimated total number of synapses. Similarly, PCP induced a reduction in brain weight, molecular layer depth, and estimated total number of synapses. Withdrawal from NMDA antagonism was initially associated with similar results, i.e., reduced brain weight, cortex depth, synaptic density, and estimated total number of synapses, along with an increase in synaptic length. By P36, however, there was a transitory rebound associated with increased molecular layer depth and estimated total number of synapses. These results support the suggestion that NMDA receptor activation is integral to naturally occurring developmental synaptogenesis, and underscore the importance of NMDA receptor involvement in the process of synaptic plasticity.
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PMID:Effect of chronic administration of NMDA antagonists on synaptic development. 913 70

We have previously shown that chronic developmental administration of N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) antagonists reduces synaptic development; however, on withdrawal from NMDA antagonism, there is a rebound period during which synaptogenesis exceeds control levels. The current research was undertaken to explore this period of withdrawal, using the noncompetitive antagonist phencyclidine (PCP), examining 2 behavioral measures in which the NMDA receptor is implicated: 1. NMDA-induced seizures, and 2. learning and memory in the Morris water maze. Using a protocol identical to that previously used to examine synaptic development, male Long-Evans rats were given 1 daily SC injection of either 10 mg/kg PCP or its physiological saline vehicle for a period of 15 days, beginning on postnatal Day 5 (P5) and ending on P20. Animals were then assessed for either sensitivity to NMDA-induced seizures on P21, P26, P36, or P56, or they were assessed for their acquisition performance and initial heading in the Morris water maze on P23, P26, P30, P38, and P75. Chronic treatment with PCP resulted in greater behavioral ratings of seizure activity after NMDA administration, observed 1 (P21), 5 (P26), and 15 (P36) days after the last injection of PCP, indicating increased sensitivity of the NMDA receptor/channel complex during this period after withdrawal from developmental NMDA antagonism. PCP-treated animals also required significantly more trials to reach criterion in the Morris water maze on P23, P26, and P30, and displayed significantly less accurate initial swim headings on all test days. The results are discussed in terms of the role of the NMDA receptor-channel complex in development and learning/memory processes.
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PMID:Altered NMDA sensitivity and learning following chronic developmental NMDA antagonism. 933 87

Rodents with different hair pigmentation patterns were studied to evaluate the role of melanin in the incorporation of phencyclidine (PCP) into hair. There are two types of melanin in hair and other tissues: eumelanin, a brown-black pigment and pheomelanin, a reddish-yellow pigment. Sprague Dawley (SD; nonpigmented), Dark Agouti (DA; brown), Copenhagen (CP; brown hooded), Long Evans (LE; black hooded), and LBNF1 (deep brown) rats and Swiss-Webster (SW; nonpigmented), C57BL6 (black), and C57BL6 Ay/a (yellow) mice were administered PCP at 10 mg/kg/day for 5 days (n = 5 for each strain). Hair was collected either 14 (rats) or 35 (mice) days (mice) after beginning drug administration and analyzed for PCP, eumelanin, and pheomelanin. PCP concentrations in ng/mg (mean +/- SEM) were as follows: SD, 0.46 +/- 0.13; DA, 12.25 +/- 1.24; CP nonpigmented, 0.12 +/- 0.004; CP pigmented, 9.16 +/- 2.8; LE nonpigmented, 0.66 +/- 0.07; LE pigmented, 21.2 +/- 1.4; LBNF1, 21.64 +/- 3.8; SW, 0.48 +/- 0.36; C57 black, 11.0 +/- 4.03; and C57 yellow, 2.26 +/- 0.55. Eumelanin concentrations in microg/mg (mean +/- SEM) were as follows: DA, 20.50 +/- 1.58; CP pigmented, 19.43 +/- 0.40; LE pigmented, 17.56 +/- 0.61; LBNF1, 27.26 +/- 2.52; C57 black, 37.33 +/- 3.61; and C57 yellow, 1.76 +/- 0.02. Eumelanin was not detected in nonpigmented hair. Pheomelanin concentrations in microg/mg (mean +/- SEM) were as follows: DA, 0.09 +/- 0.00; CP pigmented, 0.20 +/- 0.03; LBNF1, 0.06 +/- 0.01; C57 black, 0.16 +/- 0.05; and C57 yellow, 29.16 +/- 0.97. Pheomelanin was not detected in nonpigmented or LE pigmented hair. These data demonstrate that PCP is incorporated into black hair to a greater extent than yellow or nonpigmented hair. There appears to be a linear relationship between the PCP concentration in hair and the ratio of eumelanin to pheomelanin. Our data suggest that despite variations in PCP concentration because of hair color, they may be normalized by using the ratio of eumelanin to pheomelanin rather than hair weight.
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PMID:The incorporation of drugs into hair: relationship of hair color and melanin concentration to phencyclidine incorporation. 978 13

Long-Evans hooded rats were initially trained to lever press, in standard, operant conditioning chambers, according to a fixed-ratio 1 (FR1) reinforcement schedule using 0.06ml deliveries of 8% w/v ethanol as the reinforcer, during daily Monday-Friday, 1h experimental sessions. Next, experimental sessions were reduced to 0.5h, the FR value was increased to 5, and the rats were trained to discriminate 2.0mg/kg s.c. phencyclidine (PCP) from saline vehicle using standard, drug discrimination training procedures, with 8% ethanol as the reinforcer. Following training, dose-response tests with PCP (0.1-4.0mg/kg), ketamine (0.1-18mg/kg), dexoxadrol (1.0-5.6mg/kg) and morphine (1.0-9.0mg/kg) were conducted. More PCP-lever presses were emitted than saline-lever presses at several doses of PCP, ketamine, and dexoxadrol, indicating generalization from the 2.0mg/kg PCP stimulus. When morphine was tested, more saline-lever than PCP-lever presses were made, and percent PCP-lever pressing never exceeded an average of 12% at any dose tested. This study demonstrates that one drug of abuse, PCP, can serve as a discriminative stimulus when another drug of abuse, ethanol, serves as the reinforcing stimulus, and is the first explicit laboratory demonstration of drug discriminative stimulus control during drug self-administration.
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PMID:Phencyclidine established as a discriminative stimulus using ethanol as a reinforcer. 1122 52

Previous drug discrimination studies have elucidated the importance of the NMDA, GABA(A) and 5-HT(1) receptor systems in mediating the discriminative stimulus effects of ethanol. The present study used a three-choice drug discrimination paradigm in an attempt to determine whether the salient NMDA antagonistic effects were separable from other stimulus effects of ethanol. Adult Long-Evans rats (n = 7) were trained to discriminate ethanol (1.5g/kg, intragastric (i.g.)), the uncompetitive NMDA antagonist dizocilpine (0.17mg/kg, i.g.) or water (3.5ml, i.g.) under a food-reinforced fixed-ratio 15 (FR15) schedule of reinforcement. Following training, substitution tests were conducted with the GABA(A)/benzodiazepine (GABA(A)/BDZ) positive modulator pentobarbital (PB, 5.6-17mg/kg, i.g.), the uncompetitive NMDA antagonist phenycldine (PCP, 0.1-5.6mg/kg, i.p.) and the 5-HT(1) agonist RU 24969 (0.1-3.0mg/kg, i.p.). Complete substitution of PCP (ED(50), 0.9mg/kg) for dizocilpine was found in all animals. Conversely, PB (ED(50), 10mg/kg) substituted fully for ethanol in five of seven animals, whereas RU 24969 (ED(50), 1.4mg/kg) completely substituted for ethanol in only three of seven animals tested. The result demonstrate that a three-choice discrimination using dizocilpine, ethanol and water as training conditions can be established in rats. By contrasting the discriminative stimulus effects of an uncompetitive NMDA antagonist to ethanol, the ethanol-like effects of pentobarbital and RU 24969 are attenuated compared to previous studies of two-choice ethanol water discrimination.
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PMID:Assessment of the mixed discriminative stimulus effects of ethanol in a three-choice ethanol-dizocilpine-water discrimination in rats. 1122 67

Although subchronic phencyclidine (PCP) administration is recognized as a probative method to model schizophrenia-like symptoms in animals, only a few sets of data support the hypothesis of a cognitive prefrontal cortex (PFc) dysfunction in PCP-treated monkeys and rodents. Two experiments were here conducted to further test the integrity of prefrontal function in two versions of a memory for temporal order (MTO) task administered to rats. Original versions of this task elaborated by Kesner repeatedly yielded moderate to severe performance deficits in PFc lesioned rats. MTO assessment in an eight-arm radial maze consisted in a recency discrimination between two arms previously explored in the context of sequential forced choices. In Experiment 1, 16 naive Long-Evans rats were pre-trained on a variable version of the MTO task involving randomly re-mixed sequences until they reached a group criterion. Then, rats were treated daily for 21 days with PCP (10mg/kg) or saline vehicle and were tested on the same task approximately 20 h after an injection. The performance of the groups did not differ. In Experiment 2, 16 naive Long-Evans rats untrained prior to treatment received 27 daily injections of either PCP (10mg/kg) or saline vehicle and were tested, 20 h after each injection, on a constant version of the MTO task. This time, a fixed set of four sequences of successive arm entries was repeated within each daily session as well as across days. Again, prolonged PCP exposure failed to impair discrimination of temporal order despite the stability of sequential information over time. These negative results are not consistent with long-lasting hypofrontality, a major landmark of human schizophrenia, in the PCP rat model.
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PMID:Schizophrenia-like syndrome inducing agent phencyclidine failed to impair memory for temporal order in rats. 1293 31

Genetic differences in the neurochemical regulation of PPI in rats may help clarify the neural basis of inherited PPI differences in neuropsychiatric disorders. We reported and characterized substantial heritable differences in sensitivity to PPI-disruptive effects of DA agonists in outbred Sprague Dawley (SDH) versus Long-Evans (LEH) rats. Other strains might yield large group separations and facilitate studies of the neural basis for these strain differences; inbred strains might also allow us to map genes associated with differential PPI sensitivity. Sensitivity to the PPI-disruptive effects of the DA agonist apomorphine (APO) and the NMDA antagonist phencyclidine (PCP) were compared across inbred and outbred strains. APO sensitivity was greatest in SDH and buffalo rats, but the effect in buffalo rats was complicated by significant APO-induced startle suppression. PPI APO sensitivity was least in ACI and LEH rats; F344s exhibited intermediate sensitivity and Lewis rats showed a nonlinear dose response (sensitivity at low but not higher doses). PPI APO insensitivity in ACI rats developed over time, with ACI pups exhibiting robust sensitivity. Substantial strain differences were observed in short-interval (10-30 ms) prepulse effects, and APO-induced increases in short-interval PPI occurred in SDH, LEH, and Lewis rats, but not in F344, ACI, or buffalo rats. Sensitivity to PPI-disruptive effects of PCP was generally greater in outbred than inbred rats. These findings identify strains suitable for comparisons of PPI neural circuitry and others for whom such comparisons would be complex and perhaps less informative.
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PMID:Sensitivity to drug effects on prepulse inhibition in inbred and outbred rat strains. 1475 57

Performance of Long-Evans rats repeatedly treated with a high dose of phencyclidine (PCP) was compared with that of controls on two tasks involving rule shifts. Fifteen hours after receiving 12 daily doses of PCP (10mg/kg) or saline, rats were tested in the first task where a fixed or variable goal had to be recognized among four maze-arm locations. After receiving the last of 33 injections, rats were subjected to a second task: they had to discriminate the relevant perceptual dimension in a pair of stimuli and choose the appropriate stimulus in each problem. Results from both tasks revealed no difference between controls and rats injected with PCP either during acquisition using a constant rule or during testing with rule shifts. Consequently, PCP appears to lack consistency in disturbing frontal cognitive functions in animal models of schizophrenia.
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PMID:Rule shift under long-term PCP challenge in rats. 1619 31


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