Literature DB >> 17433619

Adolescent vs. adult-onset nicotine self-administration in male rats: duration of effect and differential nicotinic receptor correlates.

Edward D Levin1, Susan Slade Lawrence, Ann Petro, Kofi Horton, Amir H Rezvani, Frederic J Seidler, Theodore A Slotkin.   

Abstract

Adolescence is the life stage when tobacco addiction typically begins. Adolescent neurobehavioral development may be altered by nicotine self-administration in a way that persistently potentiates addiction. Previously, we showed that female adolescent rats self-administer more nicotine than do adults and that the increased nicotine intake then persists through the transition to adulthood [E.D. Levin, A. Rezvani, D. Montoya, J. Rose, H. Swartzwelder, Adolescent-onset nicotine self-administration modeled in female rats, Psychopharmacology 169 (2003) 141-149.]. In the current study, male Sprague-Dawley rats were given access to nicotine via the standard operant IV self-administration procedure (nicotine bitartrate dose of 0.03 mg/kg/infusion). One group of male rats started during adolescence the other group started in young adulthood. After the end of the four-week period of self-administration brain regions of the rats were assessed for alpha4beta2 nicotinic receptor binding. We found that male rats, like females, show higher nicotine self-administration when starting during adolescence as compared to starting in adulthood (p<0.001). Indeed, the effect in adolescent males was even greater than that in females, with more than triple the rate of nicotine self-administration vs. the adult-onset group during the first 2 weeks. The adolescent onset nicotine-self-administering rats also had significantly greater high affinity nicotinic receptor binding in the midbrain and the striatum, whereas hippocampal binding did not differ between the age groups. Striatal values significantly correlated with nicotine self-administration during the first 2 weeks in the adult-onset group but not the adolescent-onset rats, suggesting that the differences in self-administration may depend in part on underlying disparities in synaptic responses to nicotine. After the initial 2 weeks, nicotine self-administration in male rats declined toward adult-like levels, as the adolescent rats approached adulthood. This study showed that adolescent male rats self-administer significantly more nicotine than do male adult rats, but that adolescent-onset nicotine self-administration in male rats declines over weeks of continued use to approach adult-onset levels. In a previous study, we found that female rats also show greater nicotine self-administration with adolescent onset vs. adult onset, but that the females continued higher rates of self-administration into adulthood. Our results thus reinforce the concept that the adolescent brain is unusually receptive to the effects of nicotine in a manner that reinforces the potential for addiction.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17433619      PMCID: PMC1994941          DOI: 10.1016/j.ntt.2007.02.002

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neurotoxicol Teratol        ISSN: 0892-0362            Impact factor:   3.763


  39 in total

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3.  Adolescent nicotine exposure produces immediate and long-term changes in CNS noradrenergic and dopaminergic function.

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4.  Initial symptoms of nicotine dependence in adolescents.

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5.  Adolescent nicotine exposure causes persistent upregulation of nicotinic cholinergic receptors in rat brain regions.

Authors:  J A Trauth; F J Seidler; E C McCook; T A Slotkin
Journal:  Brain Res       Date:  1999-12-18       Impact factor: 3.252

Review 6.  Nicotinic--serotonergic interactions in brain and behaviour.

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7.  Dissociating the primary reinforcing and reinforcement-enhancing effects of nicotine using a rat self-administration paradigm with concurrently available drug and environmental reinforcers.

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8.  Acute subjective and physiological responses to smoking in adolescents.

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10.  Modeling adolescent nicotine exposure: effects on cholinergic systems in rat brain regions.

Authors:  J A Trauth; E C McCook; F J Seidler; T A Slotkin
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  85 in total

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Review 5.  Unique, long-term effects of nicotine on adolescent brain.

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Review 6.  Heterogeneity of reward mechanisms.

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Journal:  Neurochem Res       Date:  2009-12-12       Impact factor: 3.996

7.  Nicotine withdrawal produces a decrease in extracellular levels of dopamine in the nucleus accumbens that is lower in adolescent versus adult male rats.

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Review 8.  The emergence of gonadal hormone influences on dopaminergic function during puberty.

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10.  Interactions between age and the aversive effects of nicotine withdrawal under mecamylamine-precipitated and spontaneous conditions in male Wistar rats.

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