Behavioral activation following systemic administration of the N-methyl-D-aspartic acid receptor antagonist MK-801 [(+)-5-methyl-10,11-dihydroxy-5H-dibenzo(a,d) cyclohepten-5,10-imine; dizocilpine] was examined in unlesioned control and in neonatal-6-hydroxydopamine (OHDA) lesioned rats. Neonatal-6-OHDA lesioned animals were found more sensitive than control rats and female rats more sensitive than males to this MK-801-induced behavioral activation. CGS-19755, a competitive NMDA antagonist, also increased activity in neonatally lesioned animals. The increased activity level following MK-801 administration to neonatally lesioned rats was reduced, but not eliminated, by pretreatment with alpha-methyltyrosine, indicating that endogenous catecholamines were partially responsible for this action of MK-801. Furthermore, neither a D1- nor a D2-dopamine antagonist was totally effective alone in reducing MK-801-induced behavioral activation in the neonatally lesioned rats, but MK-801-induced activity was reduced to the level observed after alpha-methyltyrosine when both dopamine antagonists were administered in combination. In contrast to these results, alpha-methyltyrosine virtually eliminated the MK-801-induced activity in adult-lesioned rats. When individual behaviors induced by MK-801 were examined in neonatal-6-OHDA lesioned rats, MK-801 did not produce the same behaviors as L-dihydroxyphenylalanine or a D1- or D2-dopamine agonist. Whereas MK-801 had no major effect on most behaviors induced by specific D1- or D2-dopamine agonists, it blocked some behaviors produced after L-dihydroxyphenylalanine administration, including the self-injurious behavior. Repeated MK-801 treatment resulted in increasingly greater motor activity, but this was not related to increased D1-dopamine receptor sensitization. In support of a regional action of MK-801, MK-801 induced c-fos-like immunoreactivity in the cerebral cortex, but not in the nucleus accumbens or striatum. The action of MK-801 to increase c-fos-like immunoreactivity in cerebral cortex was reduced, but not blocked, by SCH-23390. Additionally, MK-801 reduced, but did not eliminate, D1-dopamine agonist induced c-fos-like immunoreactivity in striatum. These data suggest that MK-801 not only can facilitate dopamine release within specific brain regions, but has behavioral and functional actions distinct from dopamine agonists.