Literature DB >> 21274702

High impulsivity predicting vulnerability to cocaine addiction in rats: some relationship with novelty preference but not novelty reactivity, anxiety or stress.

Anna C Molander1, Adam Mar, Agnes Norbury, Sarah Steventon, Margarita Moreno, Daniele Caprioli, David E H Theobald, David Belin, Barry J Everitt, Trevor W Robbins, Jeffrey W Dalley.   

Abstract

RATIONALE: Impulsivity is a vulnerability marker for drug addiction in which other behavioural traits such as anxiety and novelty seeking ('sensation seeking') are also widely present. However, inter-relationships between impulsivity, novelty seeking and anxiety traits are poorly understood.
OBJECTIVE: The objective of this paper was to investigate the contribution of novelty seeking and anxiety traits to the expression of behavioural impulsivity in rats.
METHODS: Rats were screened on the five-choice serial reaction time task (5-CSRTT) for spontaneously high impulsivity (SHI) and low impulsivity (SLI) and subsequently tested for novelty reactivity and preference, assessed by open-field locomotor activity (OF), novelty place preference (NPP), and novel object recognition (OR). Anxiety was assessed on the elevated plus maze (EPM) both prior to and following the administration of the anxiolytic drug diazepam, and by blood corticosterone levels following forced novelty exposure. Finally, the effects of diazepam on impulsivity and visual attention were assessed in SHI and SLI rats.
RESULTS: SHI rats were significantly faster to enter an open arm on the EPM and exhibited preference for novelty in the OR and NPP tests, unlike SLI rats. However, there was no dimensional relationship between impulsivity and either novelty-seeking behaviour, anxiety levels, OF activity or novelty-induced changes in blood corticosterone levels. By contrast, diazepam (0.3-3 mg/kg), whilst not significantly increasing or decreasing impulsivity in SHI and SLI rats, did reduce the contrast in impulsivity between these two groups of animals.
CONCLUSIONS: This investigation indicates that behavioural impulsivity in rats on the 5-CSRTT, which predicts vulnerability for cocaine addiction, is distinct from anxiety, novelty reactivity and novelty-induced stress responses, and thus has relevance for the aetiology of drug addiction.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21274702     DOI: 10.1007/s00213-011-2167-x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychopharmacology (Berl)        ISSN: 0033-3158            Impact factor:   4.530


  52 in total

1.  Individual differences in basal and cocaine-stimulated extracellular dopamine in the nucleus accumbens using quantitative microdialysis.

Authors:  M S Hooks; A C Colvin; J L Juncos; J B Justice
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2.  Diazepam impairs behavioral inhibition but not delay discounting or risk taking in healthy adults.

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3.  Trait impulsivity predicts escalation of sucrose seeking and hypersensitivity to sucrose-associated stimuli.

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Journal:  Behav Neurosci       Date:  2009-08       Impact factor: 1.912

4.  Individual differences in stress-induced dopamine release in the nucleus accumbens are influenced by corticosterone.

Authors:  F Rougé-Pont; V Deroche; M Le Moal; P V Piazza
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5.  High-novelty-preference rats are predisposed to compulsive cocaine self-administration.

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Review 6.  Novelty-seeking in rats--biobehavioral characteristics and possible relationship with the sensation-seeking trait in man.

Authors:  F Dellu; P V Piazza; W Mayo; M Le Moal; H Simon
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7.  Evidence for addiction-like behavior in the rat.

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8.  Rats spontaneously discriminate purely visual, two-dimensional stimuli in tests of recognition memory and perceptual oddity.

Authors:  Suzanna E Forwood; Susan J Bartko; Lisa M Saksida; Timothy J Bussey
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9.  Response to novelty predicts the locomotor and nucleus accumbens dopamine response to cocaine.

Authors:  M S Hooks; G H Jones; A D Smith; D B Neill; J B Justice
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Review 1.  Responses to novelty and vulnerability to cocaine addiction: contribution of a multi-symptomatic animal model.

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3.  High locomotor reactivity to novelty is associated with an increased propensity to choose saccharin over cocaine: new insights into the vulnerability to addiction.

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4.  Viral over-expression of D1 dopamine receptors in the prefrontal cortex increase high-risk behaviors in adults: comparison with adolescents.

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5.  Poor inhibitory control and neurochemical differences in high compulsive drinker rats selected by schedule-induced polydipsia.

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6.  Genetic moderation of cocaine subjective effects by variation in the TPH1, TPH2, and SLC6A4 serotonin genes.

Authors:  Michelle A Patriquin; Sara C Hamon; Mark J Harding; Ellen M Nielsen; Thomas F Newton; Richard De La Garza; David A Nielsen
Journal:  Psychiatr Genet       Date:  2017-10       Impact factor: 2.458

7.  Association of novelty-related behaviors and intravenous cocaine self-administration in Diversity Outbred mice.

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Review 8.  On the motivational properties of reward cues: Individual differences.

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Review 9.  Rats classified as low or high cocaine locomotor responders: a unique model involving striatal dopamine transporters that predicts cocaine addiction-like behaviors.

Authors:  Dorothy J Yamamoto; Anna M Nelson; Bruce H Mandt; Gaynor A Larson; Jacki M Rorabaugh; Christopher M C Ng; Kelsey M Barcomb; Toni L Richards; Richard M Allen; Nancy R Zahniser
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10.  Attentional capacities prior to drug exposure predict motivation to self-administer nicotine.

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