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Evaluation of potential punishing effects of 2,5-dimethoxy-4-methylamphetamine (DOM) in rhesus monkeys responding under a choice procedure.

David R Maguire

Behavioural pharmacology October 1, 2024 DOI: 10.1097/fbp.0000000000000787 via PubMed

Summary

A 5-HT2A receptor agonist called DOM, tested in four rhesus monkeys using a choice procedure, showed neither rewarding nor punishing effects. When monkeys chose between a sucrose pellet alone or a pellet plus an intravenous infusion, fentanyl increased choice for the infusion (rewarding), while histamine decreased it (punishing). DOM, tested across doses of 3.2 to 100 µg/kg/infusion, did not systematically alter choice, whether given before or after histamine. This suggests DOM lacks both positive reinforcing and aversive properties under conditions sensitive to these effects.

Study at a glance

Characteristics Within-subjects experimental study Peer reviewed
Sample size 4
Population Rhesus monkeys
Citations 2
Key finding The 5-HT2A receptor agonist DOM had neither positive reinforcing nor punishing effects in a choice procedure with rhesus monkeys.

Abstract

There has been substantial and growing interest in the therapeutic utility of drugs acting at serotonin 2A subtype (5-HT 2A ) receptors, increasing the need for characterization of potential beneficial and adverse effects of such compounds. Although numerous studies have evaluated the possible rewarding and reinforcing effects of 5-HT 2A receptor agonists, there have been relatively few studies on potential aversive effects. The current study investigated punishing effects of 2,5-dimethoxy-4-methylamphetamine (DOM) in four rhesus monkeys responding under a choice procedure in which responding on one lever delivered a sucrose pellet alone and responding on the other lever delivered a sucrose pellet plus an intravenous infusion of a range of doses of fentanyl (0.1-3.2 µg/kg/infusion), histamine (3.2-100 µg/kg/infusion), or DOM (3.2-100 µg/kg/infusion). When fentanyl was available, responding for a pellet plus an infusion increased dose dependently in all subjects, indicating a positive reinforcing effect of fentanyl. When histamine was available, responding for a pellet plus an infusion decreased in three of four subjects, indicating a punishing effect of histamine. Whether available before or after histamine, DOM did not systematically alter choice across the range of doses tested. These results suggest that the 5-HT 2A receptor agonist DOM has neither positive reinforcing nor punishing effects under a choice procedure that is sensitive to both processes.

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