9 research outputs found

    BDNF signaling in the VTA links the drug-dependent state to drug withdrawal aversions

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    Drug administration to avoid unpleasant drug withdrawal symptoms has been hypothesized to be a crucial factor that leads to compulsive drug-taking behavior. However, the neural relationship between the aversive motivational state produced by drug withdrawal and the development of the drug-dependent state still remains elusive. It has been observed that chronic exposure to drugs of abuse increases brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) levels in ventral tegmental area (VTA) neurons. In particular, BDNF expression is dramatically increased during drug withdrawal, which would suggest a direct connection between the aversive state of withdrawal and BDNF-induced neuronal plasticity. Using lentivirus-mediated gene transfer to locally knock down the expression of the BDNF receptor tropomyosin-receptor-kinase type B in rats and mice, we observed that chronic opiate administration activates BDNF-related neuronal plasticity in the VTA that is necessary for both the establishment of an opiate-dependent state and aversive withdrawal motivation. Our findings highlight the importance of a bivalent, plastic mechanism that drives the negative reinforcement underlying addiction

    Identifying the Anatomical Layout and Molecular Properties of the GABAA Motivational Switch in the Ventral Tegmental Area

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    The motivation to seek natural reinforcers and drugs can transform over time from a form of pleasure-seeking to a form of relief-seeking. This shift from a positive reinforcement-based motivation to a negative reinforcement-based motivation is a hallmark of several substance use and eating disorders. Our group has demonstrated a double dissociation wherein the former motivational state is mediated by the tegmental pedunculopontine nucleus (TPP), while the latter is mediated by mesolimbic dopamine (DA). In this thesis, I demonstrate the functional role that brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and connexin-36 (Cx36)-containing gap junctions play in this switching mechanism. Specifically, I show that intra-VTA infusions of BDNF produce a drug-dependent and withdrawn phenotype in otherwise drug-naïve animals and that lentiviral knockdown of the BDNF receptor, TrkB, prevents the manifestation of opiate dependence and withdrawal. I also show that Cx36 is necessary and sufficient for opiate dependence susceptibility, as evidenced by my finding that intra-VTA infusions of the pharmacological blocker, mefloquine, result in a reversion of opiate-dependent and withdrawn (ODW) rats to a drug-naïve state, that conditional knockout mice lacking Cx36 in GAD65+ cells are perpetually drug-naïve, and that viral-mediated rescue of Cx36 in VTA GABA neurons is sufficient to restore susceptibility of those mice to opiate dependence. These studies further characterize the GABAA switch that is causally linked to maladaptive drug-seeking.Ph.D

    β2* nAChRs on VTA dopamine and GABA neurons separately mediate nicotine aversion and reward

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    International audienceEvidence shows that the neurotransmitter dopamine mediates the rewarding effects of nicotine and other drugs of abuse, while nondopaminergic neural substrates mediate the negative motivational effects. β2* nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChR) are necessary and sufficient for the experience of both nicotine reward and aversion in an intra-VTA (ventral tegmental area) self-administration paradigm. We selectively reexpressed β2* nAChRs in VTA dopamine or VTA γ-amino-butyric acid (GABA) neurons in β2-/- mice to double-dissociate the aversive and rewarding conditioned responses to nicotine in nondependent mice, revealing that β2* nAChRs on VTA dopamine neurons mediate nicotine's conditioned aversive effects, while β2* nAChRs on VTA GABA neurons mediate the conditioned rewarding effects in place-conditioning paradigms. These results stand in contrast to a purely dopaminergic reward theory, leading to a better understanding of the neurobiology of nicotine motivation and possibly to improved therapeutic treatments for smoking cessation

    VTA CRF neurons mediate the aversive effects of nicotine withdrawal and promote intake escalation

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    Dopaminergic neurons in the ventral tegmental area (VTA) are well known for mediating the positive reinforcing effects of drugs of abuse. Here we identify in rodents and humans a population of VTA dopaminergic neurons expressing corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF). We provide further evidence in rodents that chronic nicotine exposure upregulates Crh mRNA (encoding CRF) in dopaminergic neurons of the posterior VTA, activates local CRF1 receptors and blocks nicotine-induced activation of transient GABAergic input to dopaminergic neurons. Local downregulation of Crh mRNA and specific pharmacological blockade of CRF1 receptors in the VTA reversed the effect of nicotine on GABAergic input to dopaminergic neurons, prevented the aversive effects of nicotine withdrawal and limited the escalation of nicotine intake. These results link the brain reward and stress systems in the same brain region to signaling of the negative motivational effects of nicotine withdrawal
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