Protein Information

ID 2562
Name 5 HT2C
Synonyms 5 HT 2C; 5 HT2C; 5 HTR2C; 5 hydroxytryptamine (serotonin) receptor 2C; 5 hydroxytryptamine 2C receptor; 5 hydroxytryptamine receptor 2C; 5HT 1C; HTR1C…

Compound Information

ID 1819
Name piperazine
CAS piperazine

Reference

PubMed Abstract RScore(About this table)
11267640 Mehta A, Eberle-Wang K, Chesselet MF: Increased m-CPP-induced oral dyskinesia after lesion of serotonergic neurons. Pharmacol Biochem Behav. 2001 Feb;68(2):347-53.
Peripheral administration of the 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT)(2C/1B) agonist 1-(m-chlorophenyl) piperazine (m-CPP) produces abnormal orofacial movements in rats. We have previously shown that this behavior is mediated by 5-HT (2C) receptors in the subthalamic nucleus [Neuroscience 72 (1996) 117]. The present studies examined this effect after serotonin depletion to determine whether removal of endogenous serotonin affected this behavioral response and/or subthalamic 5-HT (2C) receptors. Rats received an intraventricular infusion of the neurotoxin 5,7-dihydroxytryptamine (5,7-DHT, 100 mg/10 ml) or vehicle after desipramine pretreatment (25 mg/kg ip). The efficacy of serotonin depletion was confirmed by a decrease in serotonin uptake sites measured by autoradiography. Oral dyskinesia induced by peripheral administration of m-CPP (1.0 mg/kg ip) was markedly increased in lesioned rats compared to sham-operated controls 4 and 8 but not 12 days after the lesion. A subset of lesioned rats that displayed transient seizures after m-CPP injection did not prevent the measurement of oral dyskinesia during the observation period. No differences in 5-HT (2C) receptor levels were found with ligand-binding autoradiography in the subthalamic nucleus, or in other brain regions that express this receptor, in rats sacrificed 5 days following 5,7-DHT lesions. The data indicate that lesion of serotonergic neurons in adult rats induces a transient increase in motor responses mediated by subthalamic 5-HT (2C) receptors. These data suggest that functional alterations in serotonergic transmission in the subthalamic nucleus may be involved in the pathophysiology of hyperkinetic movement disorders.
3(0,0,0,3)