| Literature DB >> 21228909 |
Janie M Ondracek1, Ingo Willuhn, Heinz Steiner, Anthony R West.
Abstract
We have previously shown that cocaine enhances gene regulation in the sensorimotor striatum associated with procedural learning in a running-wheel paradigm. Here we assessed whether cocaine produces enduring modifications of learning-related changes in striatal neuron activity, using single-unit recordings in anesthetized rats 1 day after the wheel training. Spontaneous and cortically evoked spike activity was compared between groups treated with cocaine or vehicle immediately prior to the running-wheel training or placement in a locked wheel (control conditions). We found that wheel training in vehicle-treated rats increased the average firing rate of spontaneously active neurons without changing the relative proportion of active to quiescent cells. In contrast, in rats trained under the influence of cocaine, the proportion of spontaneously firing to quiescent cells was significantly greater than in vehicle-treated, trained rats. However, this effect was associated with a lower average firing rate in these spontaneously active cells, suggesting that training under the influence of cocaine recruited additional low-firing cells. Measures of cortically evoked activity revealed a second interaction between cocaine treatment and wheel training, namely, a cocaine-induced decrease in spike onset latency in control rats (locked wheel). This facilitatory effect of cocaine was abolished when rats trained in the running wheel during cocaine action. These findings highlight important interactions between cocaine and procedural learning, which act to modify population firing activity and the responsiveness of striatal neurons to excitatory inputs. Moreover, these effects were found 24 h after the training and last drug exposure indicating that cocaine exposure during the learning phase triggers long-lasting changes in synaptic plasticity in the dorsal striatum. Such changes may contribute to the transition from recreational to habitual or compulsive drug taking behavior.Entities:
Keywords: addiction; corticostriatal transmission; dorsal striatum; habit formation; medium-sized spiny neuron; procedural learning
Year: 2010 PMID: 21228909 PMCID: PMC3017361 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2010.00206
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
Figure 1Cocaine prevents wheel training-associated increases in population firing in spontaneously active striatal neurons that receive input from the frontal cortex. (A) Representative recording of spontaneous activity of a striatal neuron identified by electrical stimulation of the frontal cortex. Inset: Magnification of the spontaneous spike activity shown below. (B) Representative firing rate histogram (2 min epoch) depicts the spontaneous activity of the single-unit shown in (A) (note the slow and irregular firing activity characteristic of striatal MSNs). (C) The firing rate distribution for all cells recorded in this study shows that most cells were quiescent (151/251) or fired at relatively low rates (91/251). A small group of outliers (9/251), made up of cells from all treatment groups, exhibited a considerably higher firing rate and was thus excluded from the analysis (the cut-off, indicated by dashed line, was set at 2 SDs above group mean). (D) Comparisons of firing rates (mean ± SEM) of spontaneously active neurons across groups (n = 15–36 cells per group) revealed a facilitatory effect of running-wheel training (after vehicle administration) on spontaneous firing (*p < 0.05, two-way ANOVA, Tukey post hoc test). This effect was prevented in rats that trained under the influence of cocaine (vs. vehicle trained, ***p < 0.001).
Proportion of spontaneously firing striatal neurons in trained and untrained (locked) groups treated with vehicle or cocaine.
| Treatment | Firing (>1 spike/120 s) | Quiescent |
|---|---|---|
| VL | 33.3% (17/51 cells) | 66.7% (34/51 cells) |
| VT | 26.8% (15/56 cells) | 73.2% (41/56 cells) |
| CL | 42.9% (36/84 cells) | 57.1% (48/84 cells) |
| CT | 53.3% (32/60 cells) | 46.7% (28/60 cells) |
Ratios in parentheses indicate the number of cells exhibiting spontaneous activity or no activity (quiescent) per number of cells tested.
*Significantly different from VT control group as determined using a Chi-square test (p = 0.007). Data were derived from n = 17–21 rats per group.
Figure 2Impact of cocaine and running-wheel training on cortically evoked activity. Striatal neurons were identified using electrical stimulation (0.5 Hz, 0.1–1.25 mA stimulus intensity, 0.25–0.50 ms pulse duration) delivered to the frontal cortex (see Materials and Methods). (A) Representative traces of cortically evoked spike responses recorded from a single-unit (overlayed records of 10 consecutive stimulations per trial; arrow indicates truncated stimulus artifact) in a vehicle-treated animal are shown. Inset: Representative peri-stimulus time histogram depicting the response of the same single-unit ASshown below to cortical stimulation delivered over 50 consecutive trials. (B) The current intensity (mean ± SEM, left) and spike probability (middle), as derived from measures of cortically evoked activity, were not different between vehicle- and cocaine-treated groups (p > 0.05; two-way ANOVA). However, the onset latency of evoked spikes was significantly decreased in animals exposed to cocaine in a locked wheel (untrained) as compared to vehicle-treated, untrained controls, or cocaine-treated, trained rats (***p < 0.001, two-way ANOVA, Tukey post hoc test, n = 17–32 cells per group).