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Abstract
Perceptual and psychic alterations and thought disorder are fundamental elements of
schizophrenia symptoms, a pathology associated with an abnormal macro- and microcircuitry
of several brain areas including the prefrontal cortex (PFC). Alterations in information
processing in PFC may partly underlie schizophrenia symptoms.
The 5-HT(2A/2C) agonist DOI and antipsychotic drugs were administered to anesthetized
rats. Single unit and local field potential (LFP) extracellular recordings were made
in medial PFC (mPFC). Electrolytic lesions were performed in the thalamic nuclei.
DOI markedly disrupts cellular and network activity in rat PFC. DOI altered pyramidal
discharge in mPFC (39% excited, 27% inhibited, 34% unaffected; n = 51). In all instances,
DOI concurrently reduced low-frequency oscillations (.3-4 Hz; power spectrum: .25
+/- .02 and .14 +/- .01 microV(2) in basal conditions and after 50-300 microg/kg intravenous
(i.v.) DOI, respectively; n = 51). Moreover, DOI disrupted the temporal association
between the active phase of LFP and pyramidal discharge. Both effects were reversed
by M100907 (5-HT(2A) receptor antagonist) and were not attenuated by thalamic lesions,
supporting an intracortical origin of the effects of DOI. The reduction in low-frequency
oscillations induced by DOI was significantly reversed by the antipsychotic drugs
haloperidol (.1-.2 mg/kg i.v.) and clozapine (1 mg/kg i.v.).
DOI disorganizes network activity in PFC, reducing low-frequency oscillations and
desynchronizing pyramidal discharge from active phases of LFP. These effects may underlie
DOI's psychotomimetic action. The reversal by clozapine and haloperidol indicates
that antipsychotic drugs may reduce psychotic symptoms by normalizing an altered PFC
function.