Role of α2A‐adrenoceptors in the effects of MDMA on body temperature in the mouse
British Journal of Pharmacology – July 18, 2005
Source: OpenAlex
Summary
MDMA significantly raises body temperature, showing a marked hyperthermic response in wild-type mice (20 mg/kg), starting around 100 minutes post-injection and normalizing by 300 minutes. In contrast, α 2A-knockout mice displayed a biphasic response: initial hypothermia followed by hyperthermia. Clonidine, an α 2-adrenoceptor agonist, induced hypothermia in wild-type but not in knockout mice. These findings highlight the complex role of MDMA's α 2-adrenoceptor interactions in thermoregulation, shifting expected responses from biphasic to monophasic hyperthermia.
Abstract
3,4‐Methylenedioxymetamphetamine (MDMA) produces complex effects on body temperature, including hypo‐ and hyperthermic components that vary with ambient temperature and strain of rat. We have previously reported that MDMA is an α 2 ‐adrenoceptor agonist, and α 2 ‐adrenoceptor agonists such as clonidine produce hypothermia. The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of MDMA on core body temperature measured by radiotelemetry in conscious wild‐type (WT) and α 2A ‐knockout ( α 2A ‐KO) mice. Clonidine (0.1 mg kg −1 , subcutaneously (s.c.)) produced a hypothermic response in WT mice, but did not significantly affect temperature in α 2 ‐KO mice. MDMA (20 mg kg −1 , s.c.) produced a significant hyperthermia in WT mice beginning at approximately 100 min after injection, recovering by 300 min, but produced a biphasic response, hypothermia followed by hyperthermia, in α 2 ‐KO mice. In WT mice, following the α 2A ‐adrenoceptor antagonist 2‐((4,5‐dihydro‐1H‐imidazol‐2‐yl)methyl)‐2,3‐dihydro‐1‐methyl‐1H‐isoindole (1 mg kg −1 , s.c.), MDMA (20 mg kg −1 ) produced an initial hypothermia. Hence, α 2 ‐adrenoceptor agonist actions of MDMA contribute to its effects on body temperature, but in a surprising way. Although selective α 2A ‐adrenoceptor agonism produces hypothermia, the α 2A ‐adrenoceptor actions of MDMA alter the body temperature response to MDMA from biphasic (hypothermia followed by hyperthermia) to monophasic hyperthemia. British Journal of Pharmacology (2005) 146 , 1–6. doi: 10.1038/sj.bjp.0706320