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The Journal of Neuroscience, January 1, 1999, 19(1):456-463
Facilitation of Sexual Behavior and Enhanced Dopamine Efflux in
the Nucleus Accumbens of Male Rats after
D-Amphetamine-Induced Behavioral Sensitization
Dennis F.
Fiorino and
Anthony G.
Phillips
Department of Psychology, University of British Columbia,
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, V6T 1Z4
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ABSTRACT |
Behavioral sensitization caused by repeated and intermittent
administration of psychostimulants, such as cocaine and
D-amphetamine, is accompanied by enhanced function in
limbic-motor circuitry that is involved in the generation of motivated
behavior. The present microdialysis study investigated the effect of
D-amphetamine-induced sensitization on dopamine (DA) efflux
in the nucleus accumbens (NAC) of male rats during sexual behavior.
Male rats were given one injection of D-amphetamine (1.5 mg/kg, i.p.) or saline every other day for a total of 10 injections.
Three weeks after discontinuation of drug treatment, rats were tested
for sexual behavior during a test in which microdialysis was performed.
There was an augmented efflux of DA in the NAC of
D-amphetamine-sensitized rats compared with nonsensitized
control rats when a receptive female was present behind a screen (35 vs
17%). Sensitized rats exhibited facilitated sexual behavior when the
screen was removed, as indicated by a significantly shorter latency to
mount and an overall increase in the amount of copulatory behavior.
Although there was a significant increase in NAC DA concentrations from
baseline in both sensitized and nonsensitized rats during copulation,
there was a greater increase in DA efflux in the NAC of sensitized rats
during the first 10 min copulatory sample (60 vs 37%). These results
demonstrate that behavioral sensitization caused by repeated
psychostimulant administration can "cross-sensitize" to a natural
behavior, such as sex, and that increased NAC DA release may contribute
to the facilitation of appetitive and consummatory aspects of this behavior.
Key words:
sensitization; D-amphetamine; sexual
behavior; motivation; appetitive; consummatory; mesolimbic; nucleus
accumbens; dopamine; microdialysis
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INTRODUCTION |
Previous exposure to
psychostimulants, such as D-amphetamine, can result in an
enhanced behavioral response to the drug, a phenomenon known as
behavioral sensitization. The development and expression of behavioral
sensitization is coincident with functional changes in limbic-motor
circuitry (Robinson and Berridge, 1993 ; Self and Nestler, 1995 ; Pierce
and Kalivas, 1997 ). This circuitry plays an integral role in the
expression of motivated or reward-driven behaviors (Phillips et al.,
1991 ; Kalivas et al., 1993 ; Robbins and Everitt, 1996 ). It has been
hypothesized for some time that the same neural mechanisms that mediate
the response to addictive drugs, sexual behavior, and feeding behavior, are functionally related (Robinson and Berridge, 1993 ; Pierce and
Kalivas, 1997 ).
Although the expression of behavioral sensitization to psychostimulants
appears to be the result of complex changes that involve numerous
neurotransmitters and nuclei, many studies have reported an enhancement
of function within the mesolimbic dopamine (DA) system (Robinson and
Berridge, 1993 ; Self and Nestler, 1995 ; Pierce and Kalivas,
1997 ). Indeed, augmented release of DA in the nucleus accumbens (NAC),
a terminal area of mesolimbic dopaminergic neurons, is one of the most
consistent findings associated with the long-term expression of
behavioral sensitization (Robinson and Becker, 1986 ; Paulson and
Robinson, 1995 ; Pierce and Kalivas, 1997 ; but see Kuczenski et al.,
1997 ).
Mesolimbic DA plays an important role as a modulator of complex reward
processes that organize motivated behaviors, such as drinking, feeding,
and sex, by the evaluation of salient environmental stimuli (Blackburn
et al., 1992 ; Kalivas et al., 1993 ; Kiyatkin, 1995 ; Salamone, 1996 ).
The incentive sensitization theory of drug addiction proposes that
repeated administration of drugs of abuse renders this DA pathway
hypersensitive and, in so doing, augments its function of attributing
incentive salience to cues associated with reward (Robinson and
Berridge, 1993 ). Recently, we demonstrated that behavioral
sensitization to psychostimulants can also enhance the incentive
properties of a natural reward (Fiorino and Phillips, 1995 ).
It is well established that the incentive properties of a sexually
receptive female are critical for sexual behavior in inexperienced male
rats (Beach, 1941 ; Madlafousek and Hlinak, 1983 ). Mesolimbic dopamine
is known to play an important facilitatory role in copulation (Everitt,
1990 ; Pfaus and Phillips, 1991 ; Mas, 1995 ; Melis and Argiolas, 1995 ),
and a number of microdialysis studies have reported increased NAC DA
efflux associated with both appetitive/motivational and consummatory
components of sexual behavior in male rats (Damsma et al., 1992 ;
Wenkstern et al., 1993 ; Mas, 1995 ; Fiorino et al., 1997a ). In our
initial study, previous exposure to D-amphetamine facilitated sexual behavior in sexually inexperienced male rats (Fiorino and Phillips, 1995 ). Given the hypothesis that this
facilitation of sexual behavior is mediated by enhanced release of NAC
DA, the present study used microdialysis to determine whether the increase in extracellular NAC DA concentration is augmented during sexual behavior in sexually inexperienced male rats sensitized to
D-amphetamine. Subsequently, a D-amphetamine
challenge was given to provide independent confirmation that augmented
NAC DA efflux is evident in D-amphetamine-sensitized rats.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
The following experiments were conducted in accordance with the
standards of the Canadian Council on Animal Care.
Subjects. Male Sprague Dawley rats (225-250 gm) were
obtained from the University of British Columbia Animal Care Center and housed individually in plastic cages. The colony room was maintained on
a reverse light/dark cycle (lights off 7 A.M. to 7 P.M.). Female Long-Evans rats (Charles River Canada, St. Constant, Quebec, Canada) were housed in a separate colony room on the same reverse light/dark cycle. Ambient temperature was ~20°C, and rats had ad
libitum access to food and water. Testing occurred during the
middle third of the dark cycle.
Surgery. Female rats were ovariectomized bilaterally under
halothane gas anesthesia (Fluothane; Ayerst Laboratories) at least 4 weeks before testing. Sexual receptivity in the stimulus females was
induced by subcutaneous injections of estradiol benzoate (10 µg) and
progesterone (500 µg), 48 and 4 hr, respectively, before each test
session. All females were sexually experienced before tests of sexual
behavior were initiated.
Male rats for each experiment were anesthetized with ketamine
hydrochloride (100 mg/kg, i.p.) and xylazine (10 mg/kg, i.p.) before
stereotaxic surgery. Microdialysis probe guide cannulae (19 gauge) were
implanted over the NAC (coordinates from bregma: anterior, +1.7 mm;
medial, 1.1 mm; and ventral, 1.0 mm from dura; flat skull), and
secured to the skull with dental acrylic and jeweler's screws. A 19 gauge wire "training post" was cemented on top of the skull behind
the guide cannulae.
Apparatus. Testing was conducted in chambers (48 × 24 × 35 cm) bisected by a removable transparent Plexiglas
partition (32 cm), creating two 12 cm wide alleys along the length.
Rats could move freely between each side on both ends of the chamber.
An antechamber (24 × 8 × 16 cm), which was used to hold an
estrous female, was located at one end of the apparatus and separated from the main body of the chamber by a wire mesh screen. Infrared photobeam emitters/detectors allowed the number of activity counts (movements from one side of the partition to the other) to be monitored
automatically by a computer (2 Hz scan rate). Chambers were cleaned
with a dilute Windex solution between behavioral tests to minimize the
influence of residual rat odors.
Induction of behavioral sensitization. Injections were
administered in the same chamber that was used for testing of sexual behavior (see below) in each experiment. In each experiment, male rats
were assigned randomly to either the repeated D-amphetamine (AMPH) or saline control (CONT) groups. At the beginning of each activity test, a steel coil, which was attached to a liquid swivel (Instech, 375 sec) mounted on top of the testing chamber, was secured
to the training post using a microdialysis probe guide collar
(see Fiorino et al., 1993 for details). In this manner, rats became
accustomed to the apparatus necessary for microdialysis. Rats were
placed into testing chambers and, after a 30 min habituation period,
given intraperitoneal injections of either D-amphetamine sulfate (1.5 mg/kg; Smith-Kline Beecham, Oakville, ON) or saline vehicle (1 ml/kg; Baxter Corporation, Toronto, Ontario, Canada). Two
hours after the injection, rats were returned to their home cages.
Injections were given once every 2 d for a total of 10 injections.
Activity counts were collected in 10 min bins, and a significant
increase from the first to the tenth test was taken as evidence for
behavioral sensitization.
Tests of sexual behavior. Before conducting the
microdialysis study, a behavioral experiment (experiment 1) was
performed on separate groups of rats (n = 10, both
groups) to confirm the facilitation of sexual behavior after
D-amphetamine sensitization, within the constraints of the
microdialysis procedure. As noted above, all rats were habituated to
the coil that connected the head assembly to the liquid swivel, during
10 tests of locomotor activity. Twenty-one days after the last
injection of D-amphetamine or saline, sexually naive rats
in the AMPH and CONT groups were tested for sexual behavior. The
experiment consisted of a 60 min baseline period in the unilevel
chamber, after which an estrous female rat was placed in the
antechamber that was separated from the main test chamber by a wire
screen. After 10 min, the screen was removed, allowing copulation to
proceed for 30 min. The female was subsequently removed, and the male
rat remained in the chamber for an additional 60 min postcopulation
period. Sexual behavior was videotaped and, subsequently, a computer
and appropriate software (courtesy of Sonoko Ogawa, Rockefeller
University) were used to record standard measures of sexual behavior:
(1) mount frequency (MF), (2) intromission frequency (IF), (3)
ejaculation frequency (EF), (4) mount and (5) intromission latencies
[ML and IL; the time (sec) from the presentation of the female to the
first mount or intromission], (6) ejaculation latency [EL; time (sec)
from the first intromission to the first ejaculation], (7) number of intromissions to the first ejaculation (IE1), (8)
postejaculatory interval [PEI; the time (sec) from the first
ejaculation to the next intromission], (9) interintromission interval
(III; EL/IE1), and (10) the intromission ratio (IR;
IF/(MF + IF)). Criteria for mounts and intromissions are described in
Sachs and Barfield (1976) .
Microdialysis. Rats (n = 10, both groups)
were implanted with microdialysis probes 12-18 hr before experiment 2 and placed in the testing chamber with ad libitum
access to food and water. On the morning of the experiment,
microdialysis samples were collected every 10 min. The experiment
consisted of five phases: (1) baseline (at least 60 min); (2) estrous
female behind the screen (10 min); (3) copulation with estrous female
(30 min); (4) postcopulation interval (60 min) after which rats were
injected with D-amphetamine (1.5 mg/kg, i.p.); and (5)
postinjection period (120 min). Sexual behavior was videotaped and
analyzed as described in experiment 1.
Microdialysis procedures and probe characteristics have been reported
previously (Fiorino et al., 1997a ). The concentrations of
microdialysate analytes, which included DA and its metabolites dihyroxyphenylacetic acid (DOPAC) and homovanillic acid (HVA), were
assessed by HPLC electrochemical detection methods (Fiorino et al.,
1997a ). Typical probe recoveries, conducted in vitro and at
room temperature, were: for DA, 20.0 ± 0.9%; DOPAC, 15.2 ± 0.9%; and HVA, 14.2 ± 0.6%.
After the microdialysis experiment, animals were given an overdose of
chloral hydrate and perfused intracardially with saline and formalin
(4%). Frozen brains were sliced, and coronal sections were stained
with cresyl violet to determine placement of microdialysis probes. Rats
with probe placements within the NAC in experiment 2 were used for
behavioral and neurochemical analyses.
Statistics.Activity counts and measures of sexual behavior
were assessed using ANOVAs. When a significant main effect was obtained, between-groups comparisons were made using simple main effects analyses. Within-groups post hoc comparisons of
total activity counts used the Newman-Keuls test. Neurochemical data were analyzed in the same manner except that Dunnett's test was used
to make within-group comparisons from control means.
A separate statistical analysis of sexual behavior data used
Kaplan-Meier plots of both ML and IL, which were assessed by survival
analyses (Bloch et al., 1993 ; Liu et al., 1997 ). The latencies to mount
and intromit and the percentage of subjects showing these behaviors are
measures of motivational components of sexual behavior. Both of these
measures are used in Kaplan-Meier plots, generated by plotting
latencies against the percentage of rats that showed the behavior
within the test. This procedure has the added advantage that data from
subjects who fail to mount or intromit are not omitted or given an
arbitrary value.
Analyses were performed using SPSS and Statistica statistical software packages.
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RESULTS |
Experiment 1: effect of D-amphetamine sensitization on
male rat sexual behavior
Locomotor activity
Rats in the AMPH group showed a progressive enhancement in
D-amphetamine-induced activity over the course of 10 injections (Fig. 1A).
There was a significant increase in the total number of activity counts
across injections in the AMPH group (Newman-Keuls; p < 0.01), indicating behavioral sensitization to
D-amphetamine.

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Figure 1.
A, B, Effect of
repeated D-amphetamine or saline injections on activity
counts accumulated over 2 hr after injection in experiment 1 (A) and experiment 2 (B).
The data are represented as mean (± SEM) activity counts. There was a
significant interaction between group and injection number in both
experiments: experiment 1, F(1,16) = 5.60, p < 0.05; experiment 2, F(1,18) = 12.44, p < 0.01. Between-group comparisons, ***p < 0.001, using simple main effects analysis. Within-group comparisons,
p < 0.01, p < 0.001, using Newman-Keuls post hoc test.
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Sexual behavior
Table 1 summarizes measures of
sexual behavior in experiment 1. There was facilitation of sexual
behavior in the AMPH (n = 10) group relative to the
CONT (n = 10) group, as indicated by significantly
shorter latencies to mount (F(1,14) = 4.80;
p < 0.05) and intromit (F(1,14) = 5.92; p < 0.05). Survival analyses of Kaplan-Meier
curves for mount latency (Fig.
2A, left
panel) and intromission latency (Fig.
2A, right panel) confirmed a
facilitation of behavior in AMPH-treated rats (Log rank statistic = 9.43, p = 0.0021; Log rank statistic = 10.48, p = 0.0012, respectively).

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Figure 2.
Effect of D-amphetamine or saline
pretreatment on latencies to mount and intromit. A,
Kaplan-Meier curve for mount latency (left
panel) and intromission latency (right
panel) in experiment 1. Independent survival analyses
showed a significant difference between sensitized (AMPH) and
nonsensitized (CONT) rats with respect to mount latency (Log rank
statistic = 9.43; p = 0.0021) and intromission
latency (Log rank statistic = 10.48; p = 0.0012). B, Kaplan-Meier curve for mount latency
(left panel) and intromission latency
(right panel) in experiment 2. Independent
survival analyses showed a significant difference between sensitized
(AMPH) and nonsensitized (CONT) rats with respect to mount latency (Log
rank statistic = 6.12; p = 0.0134) and
intromission latency (Log rank statistic = 4.38;
p = 0.0364).
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There was an overall increase in the amount of sexual behavior caused
by previous D-amphetamine exposure, as indicated by a
significantly greater number of intromissions
(F(1,16) = 5.89; p < 0.05) and
ejaculations (F(1,16) = 6.37; p < 0.05) over the 30 min copulation period as compared with the CONT
group. However, other measures from the first ejaculatory series once
copulation was initiated, such as EL, PEI, IE1, III,
and IR, were not different between groups.
Experiment 2: dopamine efflux in the NAC and sexual behavior after
D-amphetamine-induced sensitization
Locomotor activity
Repeated D-amphetamine administration again
induced behavioral sensitization in AMPH rats (Fig.
1B). Rats in the AMPH group displayed a sensitized
behavioral response to D-amphetamine, as indicated by a
significant increase in the total number of activity counts from
injection 1 to injection 10 (Newman-Keuls; p < 0.05).
Sexual behavior
Measures of sexual behavior in experiment 2 (n = 8, both groups) are shown in Table 1. Although the
AMPH group displayed shorter latencies to mount and intromit, these
measures did not differ significantly from those of the CONT group.
However, survival analyses of Kaplan-Meier curves for ML and IL (see
Fig. 4A) did reveal a significant enhancement of
sexual behavior in AMPH rats (Log rank statistic = 6.12, p = 0.0134; Log Rank statistic = 4.38, p = 0.0364, respectively). The AMPH group also achieved
more ejaculations within the 30 min copulatory period than the CONT
group (F(1,14) = 5.56; p < 0.03). Generally, the rats in experiment 2 displayed a more proficient
level of sexual behavior than rats of experiment 1, with respect to
latencies to mount, intromit, and ejaculate, as well as the overall
amount of copulation.
Neurochemistry of sexual behavior
Previous exposure to D-amphetamine did not alter basal
concentrations of DA, DOPAC, or HVA (Table
2). There was an overall change in NAC DA
efflux associated with sexual behavior (Fig. 3). Specifically, concentrations of DA in
AMPH rats were significantly elevated relative to baseline throughout
all phases of the test session, including the period when the female
was present behind a screen, during copulation, and for the 20 min
period after her removal. In contrast, significant increases in DA
concentrations in CONT rats were restricted to samples associated with
copulation. With respect to the different phases of the test,
presentation of a receptive female behind the screen (Scr; time = 20 min) resulted in a significant increase in NAC DA concentrations
from baseline values in the AMPH group (+35%; p < 0.01) but not in the CONT group (+17%). There was a further increase
in DA efflux during copulation in both groups. In AMPH rats, DA reached
maximum concentrations during the first copulatory sample (time = 30 min; +60%), and NAC DA remained elevated for 20 min after removal
of the female. Maximum DA concentrations in the CONT group occurred in
the second 10 min copulatory sample (time = 40 min; +47%).

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Figure 3.
Changes in nucleus accumbens dopamine
efflux (line graph) during baseline
(Bas), while a receptive female was present behind the
screen (Scr), during copulation, and after copulation
for CONT and AMPH rats. Bar graphs show the number
of mounts plus intromissions (top bar graph) and
ejaculations (bottom bar graph) displayed for each
group during three 10 min samples. *p < 0.05; **p < 0.01 using simple main effects
analysis. Within-group Newman-Keuls post hoc tests
revealed significant (p < 0.05) increases
in nucleus accumbens DA concentrations from baseline in AMPH (time = 20-50 min) and CONT (time = 30-50 min) rats.
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The increase in NAC DA in the AMPH group was significantly greater than
the increase obtained from the CONT group, both when the female was
behind the screen (time = 20 min) (F(1,182) = 4.76; p < 0.05) and during the first 10 min of
copulation (time = 30 min) (F(1,182) = 6.32; p < 0.05). The significant augmentation of NAC
DA efflux in the AMPH group (time = 30 min) coincided with an
increased number of mounts plus intromissions
(F(1,28) = 18.56; p < 0.01) and
ejaculations (F(1,18) = 5.09; p < 0.05) relative to the CONT group.
Extracellular concentrations of DOPAC and HVA also increased after
copulation (Fig. 4). A significant
increase in DOPAC concentrations relative to baseline occurred
during the first copulatory period in both groups and remained
significantly elevated for 70 min after injection in CONT rats
(maximum, time = 40 min; +40%) and 60 min after injection in AMPH
rats (maximum, time = 40 min; +55%). Increases in the
concentration of HVA from baseline achieved statistical significance in
the first 10 min period of copulation for the AMPH group (maximum,
time = 60 min; +50%) and remained significantly elevated for 30 min after copulation. However, HVA concentrations in AMPH rats were
still elevated just before the D-amphetamine challenge
(+28%). Concentrations of HVA in CONT rats were significantly elevated
from the last 10 min copulatory period (time = 50 min) until the
D-amphetamine injection (time = 110 min), and reached a maximum increase of +49% (time = 70 min). There was no
statistical difference in metabolite concentrations between groups at
any point in the experiment.

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Figure 4.
Changes in DOPAC (top panel)
and HVA (bottom panel) concentrations in the
nucleus accumbens during baseline (Bas), while a
receptive female was present behind the screen (Scr),
during copulation, and after copulation. Within-group Newman-Keuls
post hoc tests revealed significant
(p < 0.05) increases in nucleus accumbens
metabolite concentrations from baseline in AMPH (DOPAC, time = 30-80 min; HVA, time = 30-90 min) and CONT (DOPAC, time = 30-90 min; HVA, time = 50-100 min) rats.
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Behavior and neurochemistry after a
D-amphetamine challenge
Systemic administration of D-amphetamine (1.5 mg/kg)
resulted in a sensitized behavioral and neurochemical response by the AMPH group relative to the CONT group (Fig.
5). A repeated measures ANOVA on activity
counts revealed a significant effect of group (F(14,196) = 28.50; p < 0.01).
The increase in activity counts after D-amphetamine
administration persisted for 2 hr after the injection in both groups
relative to baseline, as assessed by Newman-Keuls post hoc
tests. The AMPH group displayed a significantly greater number of
activity counts than the CONT group in the first 30 min after the drug
injection and with respect to total activity counts after injection
(413.5 ± 37.7 vs 303.6 ± 37.8)
(F(1,14) = 4.84; p < 0.05).

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Figure 5.
Changes in nucleus accumbens dopamine efflux in
response to a D-amphetamine challenge (1.5 mg/kg, i.p.).
*p < 0.05; **p < 0.01 using
simple main effects analysis. Dopamine concentrations and activity
counts remained elevated throughout the 2 hr postinjection period
relative to baseline (Bas) in both groups.
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There was a concomitant increase in extracellular NAC DA after
injection in the CONT and AMPH groups (F(14,196) = 39.16; p < 0.01), and the increase observed in the
AMPH group was significantly greater than the CONT group in the first
40 min after injection (Fig. 5, top panel).
Both metabolites of DA decreased after injection in the CONT and AMPH
groups. Systemic administration of D-amphetamine resulted
in a significant decrease in DOPAC efflux 10 min after injection,
reaching a minimum concentration of 48% in the CONT group and 44% in
the AMPH group (time = 50 min, both groups). The maximum decrease
in HVA concentrations was delayed further, reaching significantly
depressed values 40 and 50 min after injection in CONT (minimum,
time = 80 min; 82%) and AMPH (minimum, time = 100 min; 83%)
rats, respectively. There were no differences between groups in DA
metabolite concentrations at any point after D-amphetamine administration.
The disparate changes in extracellular NAC DA metabolite
concentrations in response to sexual incentives and
D-amphetamine administration (i.e., increase and decrease,
respectively) during a period when DA efflux invariably increased, once
again emphasizes the inherent problems associated with inferring DA
transmission by changes in DA metabolite efflux (Fiorino et al., 1997a ;
O'Neill et al., 1998 ).
Histology
Microdialysis probes tracts were found in both the shell and core
regions of the NAC in a range extending from +1.60 to +2.20 mm from
bregma (Fig. 6).

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Figure 6.
Location of microdialysis probes within the
nucleus accumbens of rats used in experiment 2. Vertical black
lines correspond to the location of the active fiber area of
the microdialysis probes. For reasons of clarity, probe placements of
CONT rats are displayed on the left, and those of AMPH
rats are shown on the right. Coronal brain sections
redrawn from Paxinos and Watson (1997) .
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DISCUSSION |
Repeated and intermittent exposure to D-amphetamine,
sufficient to induce behavioral sensitization, facilitated sexual
behavior in sexually inexperienced male rats, thus confirming our
previous observations (Fiorino and Phillips, 1995 ). This effect was
replicated again in the microdialysis experiment, which showed clearly
that enhanced sexual behavior was correlated with augmented NAC DA efflux. The results of the present experiments not only provide support
for the role of mesolimbic DA in motivated behavior, but buttress the
hypothesis that changes in limbic-motor circuitry, specifically to
mesolimbic dopaminergic pathways, contribute to sensitized behavior in
response to both psychostimulant administration and natural incentives.
An earlier study found that sexual behavior was facilitated in male
rats when tested in an environment that had been paired repeatedly with
systemic morphine injections (Mitchell and Stewart, 1990 ).
Specifically, there was a preferential enhancement in motivational measures, such as the amount of anogenital exploration, the percentage of animals copulating, and latency to mount, rather than indices of
copulation itself. Although the aim of that study was to investigate whether sexual behavior could be enhanced by a conditioned association between environmental cues and opiate reward, the injection regimen used has been reported to induce behavioral sensitization to the locomotor-activating effects of morphine (Kalivas and Stewart, 1991 ).
The present experiments directly examined the influence of behavioral
sensitization on sexual behavior in male rats and found a similar
facilitation of motivational components of sexual behavior, including
mount and intromission latencies. Although the overall amount of
copulation was increased in sensitized rats, as indicated by a greater
EF and IF in the 30 min copulation period (experiment 1) and the number
intromissions plus mounts and ejaculations during the first 10 min of
copulation (experiment 2), consummatory measures within bouts of
copulation, such as IE1, III, IR, and EL were not
significantly altered. The preferential effect of sensitization on
appetitive aspects of sexual behavior confirms previous observations
(Fiorino and Phillips, 1995 ). In contrast to the study by Mitchell and
Stewart (1990) , we have found this effect to be independent of the
context in which rats received drug injections (our unpublished
observations). It should be noted that, despite the fact that all rats
in the AMPH group copulated in the present experiments,
D-amphetamine sensitization, induced by this injection
regimen, does not guarantee that sexually naive rats will copulate
(Fiorino and Phillips, 1995 ). Nevertheless, we have observed that a
very high percentage of rats preexposed to D-amphetamine
will copulate during their first test of sexual behavior (i.e.,
>85%).
Previous reports have noted that increases in medial preoptic area
(mPOA) or NAC DA efflux in response to a receptive female behind a
screen were only observed in male rats that also copulated once the
screen was removed (Hull et al., 1995 ; Wang et al., 1995 ; Fiorino et
al., 1997a ). The same relationship was observed in the present study;
in the case of an individual rat, a precopulatory increase in NAC DA
efflux was predictive of subsequent copulatory behavior. There was no
significant appetitive increase in NAC DA efflux in the CONT group.
However, two CONT rats (25%) did not copulate, and the corresponding
change in mean NAC DA concentrations in response to the receptive
female in the CONT group was attenuated. Our observation that increased
mesolimbic DA transmission was associated with copulation in naive rats
is in agreement with the results of an earlier microdialysis experiment
(Wenkstern et al., 1993 ). The present results demonstrate that
increases in NAC DA concentrations in response to sexual incentives
occur in sexually naive male rats.
There was a significant augmentation of NAC DA efflux in the AMPH group
relative to the CONT group during sexual behavior, and this was evident
during both the appetitive phase (i.e., female behind the screen) and
the first copulatory sample. As mentioned above, noncopulating CONT
rats did not contribute to the appetitive or copulatory rise in NAC DA
concentrations. Therefore, the increased amount of copulation observed
during the first copulatory sample in AMPH rats relative to CONT rats,
and in particular the greater number of ejaculations, may explain the
augmented efflux of NAC DA in the AMPH group. Chronoamperometry
experiments conducted in our laboratory have shown that peak oxidation
currents associated with DA are correlated with ejaculations (Phillips
et al., 1991 ; Fiorino et al., 1997b ), although it is difficult to
determine whether ejaculation or the vigorous pursuit activity leading
to ejaculation is correlated with maximal NAC DA efflux. In this regard, it is important to note that the "consummatory" phase of
male rat sexual behavior (i.e., copulation) contains many appetitive components (Fiorino et al., 1997a ), and it is impossible, in the present study, to correlate NAC DA efflux preferentially with one
component or the other. Nevertheless, the intense behavior of
sensitized rats during the first copulatory sample, relative to CONT
rats, may account for differences in neurochemical profiles between groups.
The presence of augmented dopaminergic transmission in the NAC induced
by repeated D-amphetamine administration lends support to
the observation that enhanced dopaminergic activity can facilitate the
initiation of sexual behavior in sexually naive male rats (Agmo and
Picker, 1990 ). Dopamine in the mPOA is involved in both appetitive and
consummatory aspects of male rat sexual behavior (Pfaus and Phillips,
1991 ; Hull et al., 1993 , 1995 ; Shimura et al., 1994 ; Mas et al., 1995 ;
Sato et al., 1995 ), and enhanced mPOA DA transmission may have
contributed to facilitation of sexual behavior observed in the present study.
A systemic D-amphetamine challenge also resulted in
augmented locomotor behavior and NAC DA efflux in the AMPH group
relative to the CONT group. This finding contributes to the growing
literature demonstrating that increased striatal DA transmission
accompanies behavioral sensitization to psychostimulants, when assessed
after extended periods (>14 d) after discontinuation of drug treatment (for review, see Pierce and Kalivas, 1997 ; but see Kuczenski et al.,
1997 ). Caution must be exercised, however, in comparing these results
with previous reports because the present drug challenge was
administered after a period of sexual activity, and residual sex-related odors may have contributed, perhaps differentially, to
neurochemical responses in both groups. Bedding from the cages of
estrous females has been reported to increase extracellular NAC DA in
male rats (Mitchell and Gratton, 1992 ).
Our results are consistent with the incentive-sensitization theory of
drug addiction (Robinson and Berridge, 1993 ), which proposes that the
incentive value of cues associated with reward is enhanced because of
repeated administration of psychostimulants via an augmentation of
mesotelencephalic DA function; enhanced mesotelencephalic DA
transmission ultimately contributes to compulsive drug seeking and drug
taking, which are defining features of drug addiction. Previous
experiments with drug reward found that preexposure of animals to
psychostimulants facilitated various measures of self-administration of
drugs of abuse (Woolverton et al., 1984 ; Horger et al., 1990 , 1992 ;
Piazza et al., 1990 ; Mendrek et al., 1998 ; but see Li et al., 1994 ). In
a recent study, Mendrek et al. (1998) demonstrated that
D-amphetamine-sensitized rats exhibited increased
motivation to self-administer D-amphetamine, as indicated by a significantly higher break point under a progressive ratio schedule of reinforcement. The present study extends the enhancement of
motivated behaviors caused by repeated psychostimulant administration to those elicited by natural incentives. In this case, previous D-amphetamine treatment may have amplified the importance
of unconditioned incentive cues of the estrous female, which included
pheromones, ultrasonic vocalizations, ear wiggling, and darting, and
led to a facilitation of sexual behavior. The presence of augmented NAC DA transmission in response to an estrous female located behind a
screen strengthens the argument that the mesolimbic DA system contributes to this effect.
Cross-sensitization between DA uptake blockers and sexual behavior is
also supported by clinical observations. Bupropion, an antidepressant
drug that can block DA uptake (Cooper et al., 1980 ; Nomikos et al.,
1989 ), enhanced sexual function in male and female patients treated for
sexual dysfunction (Crenshaw and Goldberg, 1995 ) and psychiatric
disorders (Modell et al., 1997 ). It is interesting that preclinical
studies have shown that long-term (10 mg/kg, b.i.d. × 21 d), but
not acute (10 mg/kg, b.i.d. × 2 d), administration of bupropion
results in augmented NAC DA efflux in response to a bupropion challenge
(Nomikos et al., 1989 , 1992 ). In contrast, there was no significant
augmentation of DA transmission observed in the striatum after chronic
bupropion treatment (Nomikos et al., 1992 ). The development of the
prosexual effects of bupropion may be a consequence of neural changes
similar to those involved in the initiation and expression of
behavioral sensitization to psychostimulants. Therefore, the ability of
a compound to induce long-term functional enhancement in the mesolimbic
DA system may provide valuable information about its potential to treat
sexual dysfunction.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Aug. 3, 1998; revised Oct. 16, 1998; accepted Oct. 21, 1998.
This work was supported by Group Grant PG-12808 from the Medical
Research Council of Canada. We thank David Mutch for his help in
conducting these experiments and Fred LePiane and Keith Waldron for
their assistance in construction of testing chambers. Also, many thanks
to Ariane Coury and Jim Pfaus for their helpful comments and Liz
McCririck for her secretarial services.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. A. G. Phillips,
University of British Columbia, Department of Psychology, 2136 West Mall, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, V6T 1Z4.
 |
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