34 research outputs found
Environmental enrichment facilitates cocaine-cue extinction, deters reacquisition of cocaine self-administration and alters AMPAR GluA1 expression and phosphorylation
This study investigated the combination of environmental enrichment (EE) with cocaineâcue extinction training on reacquisition of cocaine selfâadministration. Rats were trained under a secondâorder schedule for which responses were maintained by cocaine injections and cocaineâpaired stimuli. During three weekly extinction sessions, saline was substituted for cocaine but cocaineâpaired stimuli were presented. Rats received 4âh periods of EE at strategic time points during extinction training, or received NoEE. Additional control rats received EE or NoEE without extinction training. One week later, reacquisition of cocaine selfâadministration was evaluated for 15 sessions, and then GluA1 expression, a cellular substrate for learning and memory, was measured in selected brain regions. EE provided both 24âh before and immediately after extinction training facilitated extinction learning and deterred reacquisition of cocaine selfâadministration for up to 13 sessions. Each intervention by itself (EE alone or extinction alone) was ineffective, as was EE scheduled at individual time points (EE 4âh or 24âh before, or EE immediately or 6âh after, each extinction training session). Under these conditions, rats rapidly reacquired baseline rates of cocaine selfâadministration. Cocaine selfâadministration alone decreased total GluA1 and/or pSer845GluA1 expression in basolateral amygdala and nucleus accumbens. Extinction training, with or without EE, opposed these changes and also increased total GluA1 in ventromedial prefrontal cortex and dorsal hippocampus. EE alone increased pSer845GluA1 and EE combined with extinction training decreased pSer845GluA1 in ventromedial prefrontal cortex. EE might be a useful adjunct to extinction therapy by enabling neuroplasticity that deters relapse to cocaine selfâadministration.The authors declare no competing financial interests. These studies were supported by NSF grant SMA-0835976 to the CELEST Science of Learning Center at Boston University and by NIH grants DA024315 (KMK) and MH079407 (HYM). We thank Iris Mile, Zachary Silber, Sharone Moverman and Enjana Bylykbashi for expert technical assistance. (SMA-0835976 - NSF; DA024315 - NIH; MH079407 - NIH)https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4798903/Published versio
THE JOURNAL Noradrenergic Involvement in the Discriminative Stimulus Effects of Cocaine in Squirrel Monkeys1
ABSTRACT ABBREVIATIONS: DA, dopamine; OS, discriminative stimulus; 5-HT, serotonin; NE, norepinephrine; FR, fixed-ratio; Cl, confidence interval. 5