This thesis is concerned with lysine vasopressin's (LVP's)
behavioural activity. Chapter One describes vasopressin's synthesis,
secretion, metabolism, pressor, antidiuretic and putative corticotrophic
functions with emphasis on behaviourally significant aspects. Chapter
Two reviews behavioural data showing that manipulations of endogenous
vasopressin levels alter subsequent avoidance performance. Although
these data have predominantly been interpreted in favour of vasopressin
altering memory formation (consolidation) results reported from an
experiment combining response prevention trials and vasopressin injections
failed to support the consolidation hypotheis. Chapter Three
reviews the response prevention literature and confirms the feasibility
of using prevention trials with automated shuttle box training
(Experiment One). LVP (1 µg/rat) injected immediately after training
increased subsequent extinction responding (Experiment Two). Experiment
Three showed that LVP (1 µg/rat) increased responding when injected
immediately after prevention trials but decreased extinction responding
when injected after 30 minutes of post training retention in the home
cage or 30 extinction trials. LVP injections 30 minutes after training
and immediately after prevention trials increased suppression of concurrent
lever press responding 24 hours later (Experiment Four). Manipulating
the training-injection interval after automated training
yielded maximal response reductions with a 60 minute interval (Experiment
Five) with indications of a negative dose response curve for higher
(2-4 µg/rat) doses (Experiment Six). Manual shuttle box tests showed
that with a 30 minute training-injection interval subsequent extinction
responding varied as an inverted "U" shaped function of the LVP dose
(Experiment Seven). Opposite effects of 0.11 µg/rat and 2.97 µg/rat
were confirmed with higher training shock levels (Experiment Nine). A
further experiment (Experiment Eight) revealed a complex interaction
between dose and injection interval. Extinction responding was also
reduced by some doses of DG-LVP (Experiment Ten). Post training manipulation
of cholinergic activity did not alter LVP's response reducing
effects in well trained rats (Experiment Eleven) although some cholinergic
involvement was indicated (Experiment Fourteen) in the response
increasing effects of LVP (1 µg/rat) injected 30 minutes after training
in poor avoidance learners (Experiments Twelve and Thirteen). Tests on
the suitability of appetitive responding for exploring vasopressin's
behavioural effects showed that both a variable interval (60 seconds)
schedule and differential reinforcement of low response rates (DRL)
schedule were sensitive to high LVP doses (3-4 µg/rat). The implications
of these data for our understanding of vasopressin's behavioural effects
are discussed.
Date of Award | 1980 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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The Effects of Lysine Vasopressin on Conditioned Behaviour in Rats
Hagan, J. J. (Author). 1980
Student thesis: PhD