RATIONALE: The tendency to use cocaine is determined by genetic and environmental effects across the lifespan. One critical environmental effect is early drug exposure, which is both driven by and interacts with genetic background. The mesoaccumbens dopamine system, which is critically involved in the rewarding properties of drugs of abuse, undergoes significant development during adolescence, and thus may be at particular risk to repeated nicotine exposure during this period, thereby establishing vulnerability for subsequent adult psychostimulant use. OBJECTIVES: We tested the hypotheses that adolescent nicotine exposure results in attenuation of the enhancing effects of cocaine on medial forebrain bundle (MFB) electrical stimulation-evoked dopamine release in the nucleus accumbens shell (AcbSh) in adulthood and that this effect is significantly influenced by genotype. METHODS: Mice from the progenitor strains C57BL/6J and DBA/2J and those from the BXD20/TyJ and BXD86/RwwJ recombinant inbred lines were exposed to nicotine via osmotic minipumps from postnatal day (P) 28 to P56. When mice reached P70, dopamine functional dynamics in AcbSh was evaluated by means of in vivo fixed potential amperometry in combination with electrical stimulation of mesoaccumbens dopaminergic axons in the MFB. RESULTS: Adolescent exposure to nicotine in all strains dose-dependently reduced the ability of a fixed-dose challenge injection of cocaine (10 mg/kg, i.p.) to enhance MFB electrical stimulation-evoked dopamine release in AcbSh in adults. The magnitude of this effect was genotype-dependent. CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest a genotype-dependent mechanism by which nicotine exposure during adolescence causes persistent changes in the sensitivity to "hard" stimulants such as cocaine.
RATIONALE: The tendency to use cocaine is determined by genetic and environmental effects across the lifespan. One critical environmental effect is early drug exposure, which is both driven by and interacts with genetic background. The mesoaccumbens dopamine system, which is critically involved in the rewarding properties of drugs of abuse, undergoes significant development during adolescence, and thus may be at particular risk to repeated nicotine exposure during this period, thereby establishing vulnerability for subsequent adult psychostimulant use. OBJECTIVES: We tested the hypotheses that adolescent nicotine exposure results in attenuation of the enhancing effects of cocaine on medial forebrain bundle (MFB) electrical stimulation-evoked dopamine release in the nucleus accumbens shell (AcbSh) in adulthood and that this effect is significantly influenced by genotype. METHODS:Mice from the progenitor strains C57BL/6J and DBA/2J and those from the BXD20/TyJ and BXD86/RwwJ recombinant inbred lines were exposed to nicotine via osmotic minipumps from postnatal day (P) 28 to P56. When mice reached P70, dopamine functional dynamics in AcbSh was evaluated by means of in vivo fixed potential amperometry in combination with electrical stimulation of mesoaccumbens dopaminergic axons in the MFB. RESULTS: Adolescent exposure to nicotine in all strains dose-dependently reduced the ability of a fixed-dose challenge injection of cocaine (10 mg/kg, i.p.) to enhance MFB electrical stimulation-evoked dopamine release in AcbSh in adults. The magnitude of this effect was genotype-dependent. CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest a genotype-dependent mechanism by which nicotine exposure during adolescence causes persistent changes in the sensitivity to "hard" stimulants such as cocaine.
Authors: J N Giedd; J Blumenthal; N O Jeffries; F X Castellanos; H Liu; A Zijdenbos; T Paus; A C Evans; J L Rapoport Journal: Nat Neurosci Date: 1999-10 Impact factor: 24.884
Authors: Tiffany D Rogers; Price E Dickson; Detlef H Heck; Dan Goldowitz; Guy Mittleman; Charles D Blaha Journal: Synapse Date: 2011-06-17 Impact factor: 2.562
Authors: Shannon L Zandy; Douglas B Matthews; Anthony Miller; Sayaka Tokunaga; Charles D Blaha; Guy Mittleman Journal: Psychopharmacology (Berl) Date: 2014-08-14 Impact factor: 4.530
Authors: Price E Dickson; Mellessa M Miller; Tiffany D Rogers; Charles D Blaha; Guy Mittleman Journal: Addict Biol Date: 2012-09-17 Impact factor: 4.280
Authors: Joao A Paulo; Mark P Jedrychowski; Edward T Chouchani; Lawrence Kazak; Steven P Gygi Journal: Proteomics Date: 2018-05-02 Impact factor: 3.984
Authors: Price E Dickson; Mellessa M Miller; Michele A Calton; Jason A Bubier; Melloni N Cook; Daniel Goldowitz; Elissa J Chesler; Guy Mittleman Journal: Psychopharmacology (Berl) Date: 2015-11-19 Impact factor: 4.530
Authors: Yan Han; Man To Ling; Huawei Mao; Jian Zheng; Ming Liu; Kwok Tai Lam; Yuan Liu; Wenwei Tu; Yu-Lung Lau Journal: PLoS One Date: 2014-01-21 Impact factor: 3.240