Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P08908 (5-HT1A)
5,574 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Unlesioned rats exploring a black-white two compartment box spent most of the time in the covered, black half of the box and only little time in the uncovered, white half (67 s/5 min). Large radio-frequency lesions of the amygdala or hippocampus did not alter this pattern of exploration, but rats with hippocampus lesions were more active than the other two groups of rats. Treatment with the 5-HT1A receptor agonist buspirone (0.1 mg/kg, s.c.) increased the time that unlesioned rats spent in the uncovered compartment (103 s), an effect that was less pronounced in hippocampus-lesioned rats and completely abolished by amygdala lesions. In a food transport test, unlesioned rats that traveled from a home cage to an exposed food source consumed small and medium-sized pellets immediately at the food source. Larger pellets, however, were carried back to the home cage for consumption. Rats with amygdala lesions ate fewer pellets at the food source and tended to carry more pellets back to the home cage for consumption than unlesioned rats. Rats with hippocampus lesions carried fewer pellets back to the home cage and ate more pellets at the food source. Buspirone (0.5-1.5 mg/kg, s.c.) reduced the carrying of large food items to the home cage and increased consumption of these pellets at the food source in all groups of rats. These results suggest that neither the amygdala nor the hippocampus play an important role in controlling exploratory behavior in a black-white compartment box, but that the amygdala may have some role in mediating the effect of buspirone to increase exploration of the white/open compartment. Further, the amygdala and hippocampus have opposing influences on the transport of food items to a shelter, the amygdala suppressing food carrying, and the hippocampus enhancing it. Neither structure is essential for the effect of buspirone to reduce food carrying. The hypothesis that limbic structures mediate 'fear/anxiety' responses is discussed critically.
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PMID:Effects of amygdaloid lesions, hippocampal lesions, and buspirone on black-white exploration and food carrying in rats. 982 52

Buspirone is an anxiolytic drug which exerts several central effects. It antagonizes presynaptic inhibitory DA2 autoreceptors at dopaminergic neurons and acts as an agonist for 5-HT1A inhibitor autoreceptors at serotonergic cells. Thus, buspirone respectively enhances and depresses the firing rates of both type of neurons. At doses which correlate with dopaminergic stimulation, but not 5-HT inhibition, buspirone also increases the firing rates of the central noradrenergic cells. We measured levels of circulating neurotransmitters before and up to 240 minutes after the oral administration of 20 mg of buspirone in 32 healthy volunteers. Buspirone significantly increased levels of noradrenaline, dopamine, and free serotonin but did not affect levels of adrenaline, tryptophane, or platelet serotonin. Small but significant drops in systolic blood pressure and heart rate were observed after buspirone ingestion. Atropine administration before buspirone ingestion annulled the free serotonin increase as well as systolic blood pressure-heart rate decrease. We found significant positive correlations between noradrenaline and dopamine levels. The strength and significance of these correlations were increased by using the noradrenaline/adrenaline ratio instead of noradrenaline absolute values. This finding indicates that increases in both noradrenaline and dopamine arise from sympathetic nerves rather than the adrenal glands. We also found significant negative correlations between free serotonin increases and systolic blood pressure-heart rate decreases. Our results indicate that buspirone stimulates central sympathetic activity. These acute effects of buspirone are reflected in an increased peripheral neural sympathetic activity, but not adrenal sympathetic activity in healthy individuals. In addition, buspirone increases free serotonin plasma concentrations and decreases systolic blood pressure plus heart rate levels through mechanisms associated with parasympathetic activation.
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PMID:Effects of buspirone on plasma neurotransmitters in healthy subjects. 982 2

Modulation of the sexual behavior of male rats by the anxiolytic buspirone (S-20499) and its analog gepirone were compared to the effects of 8-OH-DPAT (or DPAT, a selective 5-HT1A reference agonist), and BMY-7378 (a selective 5-HT1A partial agonist). Long-Evans rats were used; modulation of copulatory behavior and alteration of penile reflexes were examined. Modulation of copulatory behavior was assessed by three indices: frequency and length of intromission, and latency of ejaculation. DPAT, at doses of 1-8 mg/kg, reduced these three indices in a time dependent manner such that the effects peaked at 45 min and normalized at 90 min. The dose-effect relationship (assessed 45 min after DPAT injection) is bell-shaped with an ED50 approximately 1 mg/kg on the ascending limb of the curve. The effects of buspirone (2 mg/kg) and gepirone (2 mg/kg) on copulatory behavior were indistinguishable from control. BMY-7378 alone and in combination with these other 5-HT1A agonists reduced copulatory behavior, though not statistically significant. Penile reflexes, including number of erections, cups and flips, were inhibited by these agents: DPAT>buspirone>gepirone (inactive at 2 mg/kg). Furthermore, the latency period to erection was at least doubled by DPAT (2 mg/kg). Buspirone and gepirone, however, reduced the latency period to erection. BMY-7378 inhibited penile reflexes when administered alone and even more in combination with DPAT or buspirone. Two butyrophenone analogs, spiperone (a 5-HT1A and dopamine D2 antagonist) and haloperidol (a D2 antagonist), were also tested for their interaction with DPAT. Both of these drugs (at 0.25 mg/kg, 60 min after administration) reduced all indices of penile reflexes and copulation. Furthermore, in combination with DPAT (2 mg/kg, 45 min), the effects were synergistic such that sexual activity came nearly to a standstill. These opposing effects on putatively brain originated copulatory behavior and spinal mediated penile reflexes indicate that the effects of buspirone and DPAT on sexual behavior in the male rat may be possible at different parts of the central nervous system. If a tentative shared target site by DPAT and buspirone is the 5-HT1A receptor, than the same 5-HT receptor sub-type at different locations (brain, raphe nuclei, spinal cord and autonomic ganglia) may modulate rat sexual behavior in opposing ways.
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PMID:Modification of sexual behavior of Long-Evans male rats by drugs acting on the 5-HT1A receptor. 1006 29

The effect of the 5-HT1A agonists ipsapirone (5 mg/kg), buspirone (5 mg/kg) and 8-OH-DPAT (0.5 mg/kg) on experimental anxiety was examined in sham-operated, adrenalectomized and adrenally demedullated male rats. The animal model of anxiety used was the defensive burying test. At the doses selected, all 5-HT1A compounds produced an anxiolytic-like action by reducing the burying behavior in both sham-operated and demedullated rats. However, in adrenalectomized subjects, while 8-OH-DPAT still reduced burying behavior, ipsapirone and buspirone lost their action. Data suggest that adrenocortical secretions play a role in the anxiolytic-like actions of buspirone and ipsapirone, but not in those of 8-OH-DPAT. Buspirone and ipsapirone also produced a reduction in burying behavior latency in sham-operated animals that was not observed in adrenalectomized or adrenally demedullated rats. These data suggest that adrenaline may be participating in the action of these compounds on the burying behavior latency. Present findings support possible direct relationships between the stimulation of 5-HT1A receptors and adrenal secretions.
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PMID:Blockade of the anxiolytic-like action of ipsapirone and buspirone, but not that of 8-OH-DPAT, by adrenalectomy in male rats. 1034 68

Buspirone is an azapirone with 5-HT1A partial agonist activity which has demonstrated efficacy in the treatment of generalized anxiety disorder, commonly referred to as persistent anxiety. In this meta-analysis report, safety results from two studies comparing buspirone 15 mg twice daily (BID) with buspirone 10 mg three times daily (TID) in patients with persistent anxiety are presented. In the study protocols, qualified patients completed a 7-day placebo lead-in phase and were randomized to receive buspirone 30 mg per day, as either a BID or TID regimen, for 6-8 weeks. A total of 289 patients received buspirone 15 mg BID (n = 144) or 10 mg TID (n = 145) at 15 sites. The incidence of adverse events was similar between the two treatment groups, except for a significantly greater incidence of palpitations in patients receiving buspirone BID (5%) compared to buspirone TID (1%). The most frequently reported adverse events for both buspirone BID- and TID-treated patients were dizziness, headache, and nausea. No appreciable differences between treatments were observed for vital signs, physical exam, ECG, or clinical laboratory results. A change to BID dosing for buspirone may offer convenience and possibly higher compliance in patients with persistent anxiety without compromising the excellent safety and tolerability profile of the medication.
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PMID:Meta-analysis of the safety and tolerability of two dose regimens of buspirone in patients with persistent anxiety. 1035 51

Buspirone, a 5-HT1A agonist, has been shown to decrease the intake of ethanol when given as a single dose to rats with a psychological dependence induced according to our rat model of alcoholism. The present experiment evaluates the effects different treatments with buspirone have on voluntary ethanol intake in these psychologically dependent rats. As a first treatment, buspirone was given once daily for 23 days at the dose of 20 mg/kg/day. Ethanol was withheld except for the first and the last day of the treatment. On the first day, the buspirone injection decreased ethanol intake from the pretreatment value (1.94+/-0.18 g/kg/day), down to 1.36+/-0.18 g/kg (p < 0.01, n = 12). The rats were again given a choice between water and 10% ethanol after the last injection of buspirone. During the following 24 hr period, the ethanol intake was increased to 3.56+/-0.24 g/kg/day (p < 0.001 vs. the pretreatment intake, n = 12). A loss of correlation with the pretreatment intake of ethanol indicated an altered regulation of ethanol intake for approximately 3 more weeks. Fifteen weeks after the start of the first treatment, buspirone (20 mg/kg) was re-tested as a single dose, with no effect on ethanol intake. Twenty-two weeks after the start of the first treatment, a 1-week treatment with 20 mg/kg/day of buspirone was started. During this treatment, the rats had a continuous choice between 10% ethanol and water. There was, as in the first re-test, no effect on ethanol intake on the first day of the treatment. However, on the last 2 days of the treatment, the ethanol intake was increased to 2.86+/-0.28 g/kg and to 2.89+/-0.26 g/kg respectively (p < 0.05, n = 10 on both days, compared with the pretreatment intake of 1.78+/-0.36 g/kg). Thus, an acute dose of buspirone can decrease voluntary ethanol intake in psychologically dependent rats, but long-lasting changes in the effect of buspirone seem to develop during a 3-week treatment period.
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PMID:Acute and long term effects of buspirone treatments on voluntary ethanol intake in a rat model of alcoholism. 1037 1

The effects of buspirone, fluvoxamine and diazepam were investigated, using healthy volunteers, in an aversive conditioning paradigm, a putative model for conditioned anxiety. The main prediction was that buspirone, an anxiolytic agent which reduces activity in serotonin (5-hydroxytryptophan, 5-HT) neurones, would attenuate aversively conditioned skin conductance responses. Skin conductance responses were recorded to 10 neutral tones (habituation phase). Tone 11 was immediately followed by a 1-s 90-dB aversive white noise (unconditioned stimulus). The conditioning trial reinstated responding to a second presentation of the tones (extinction phase). Skin conductance response amplitude, inter-response level and spontaneous fluctuations were recorded. There were five treatment groups comprising five men and five women. One control group took placebo, another control group received nothing; there was no effect of placebo on any measure. Diazepam (2 mg, p.o.), a positive comparator, markedly reduced the amplitude of skin conductance responses at all phases of the experiment, but only in women. Buspirone (5 mg, p.o.) had the predicted effect of accelerating extinction but also of unexpectedly accelerated habituation of skin conductance responses. There was a trend to reduce spontaneous fluctuations and no effect on skin conductance level. The effects of buspirone were thus specific to responses to stimuli. Fluvoxamine (25 mg, p.o.) had similar effects to buspirone and diazepam in women. An action common to buspirone, fluvoxamine and diazepam, which may account for their shared effect on conditioned autonomic responses, is the suppression of neural activity in the dorsal raphe nucleus. It is argued that enhanced habituation must involve a different mechanism, such as enhanced 5-HT1A function in the terminal fields of the median raphe nucleus.
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PMID:Comparison of buspirone with diazepam and fluvoxamine on aversive classical conditioning in humans. 1047 16

We have studied the effects of acute serotonin (5-HT) 5-HT1A receptor agonist buspirone (0.5, 1.0, 2.5 and 5.0 mg/kg, s.c.), gepirone (5.0 and 10 mg/kg, s.c.), and 8-OH-DPAT (0.1, 0.25, and 0.5 mg/kg, i.p.) treatment on the apomorphine-induced aggressive behaviour in adult male Wistar rats. Buspirone in doses of 2.5 and 5.0 mg/kg completely blocked, gepirone (10 mg/kg) significantly attenuated the aggressiveness, and 8-OH-DPAT abolished aggressive behaviour only in the lowest dose used (0.1 mg/kg) which effect disappeared in higher doses. The antiaggressive effect of buspirone (2.5 mg/kg) and gepirone (10 mg/kg) was not reversed by a 5-HT1A receptor antagonist WAY 100635 (0.3 mg/kg). All 5-HT1A receptor agonists tested dose-dependently decreased the exploratory behaviour of experimentally naive rats, while buspirone (2.5 mg/kg) and gepirone (10 mg/kg) had only a weak effect on the locomotor activity and stereotyped behaviour in the apomorphine-pre-sensitised rats. In conclusion, our experiments demonstrate the 5-HTIA receptors may be involved in the mediation of the apomorphine-induced aggressive behaviour in adult male Wistar rats. However, the prominent antiaggressive effect of buspirone, and to a lesser extent--gepirone, seems to be mediated by some other mechanisms, evidently via the dopamine D2 receptors.
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PMID:5-HT1A receptor agonists buspirone and gepirone attenuate apomorphine-induced aggressive behaviour in adult male Wistar rats. 1122 Apr 92

Previous reports indicate that the behavioural effects (including anxiolytic-like actions, hypothermia, "serotonergic syndrome," maternal behaviour and aggression and reduction in ambulation) of the 5-HT1A agonist, 8-hydroxy-2-(di-n-propylamino)tetralin (8-OH-DPAT), are completely blocked in lactating rats. The present study compares the behavioural effects of buspirone (1.25, 2.5 and 5.0 mg/kg) and diazepam (0.5, 1.0, 2.0 and 4.0 mg/kg) between ovariectomized and mid-lactating rats. The study was carried out on Wistar female rats under inverted light/dark cycle conditions, by using the burying behaviour paradigm, the elevated plus maze and a general activity test. In both ovariectomized and lactating rats, diazepam produced a dose-dependent reduction in burying behaviour and an increase in the time spent in open arms, responses interpreted as anxiolytic. Buspirone at all doses (1.25, 2.5 and 5.0 mg/kg) produced clear motor impairments in lactating, but not in ovariectomized animals, indicating that the effects of this drug on the anxiety paradigms are unspecific. Diazepam, by contrast, at the highest dose (4.0 mg/kg) similarly inhibited ambulation in both conditions. In the elevated plus maze, control lactating subjects spent more time in the open arms compared with saline-treated ovariectomized subjects, suggesting an anxiolytic-like effect of lactation per se. The present results support the idea that some behavioural actions of drugs acting at the serotonergic system vary between ovariectomized and lactating rats.
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PMID:Diazepam, but not buspirone, induces similar anxiolytic-like actions in lactating and ovariectomized Wistar rats. 1156 45

Buspirone (busp) a piperazinyl derivative with anxiolytic properties is a partial agonist on 5-HT1A with affinity for D2-like dopaminergic receptors (RD2). The objective of this study was to verify the effects of busp on RD2. Female Wistar rats 150-200 g were treated with busp (5 and 10 mg/kg, p.o.) 1 or 2 times daily for 7 days. Controls (C) received saline. The density of RD2 (fmol/mg protein) was determined through binding assays in striatum (ST) using [3H]-spiroperidol as radioligand. No alteration in Bmax or Kd values were seen after busp administration once a day. However, a RD2 upregulation of 55 % increase was observed after busp 2 times a day with no change in Kd values. The results showed that busp interact not only with serotonergic, but also with dopaminergic system.
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PMID:[Buspirone increases D2-like dopaminergic receptor density in rat corpus striatum]. 1196 7


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