Literature DB >> 23337868

Effects of chronic buspirone treatment on nicotine and concurrent nicotine+cocaine self-administration.

Nancy K Mello1, Peter A Fivel, Stephen J Kohut.   

Abstract

Nicotine dependence and cocaine abuse are major public health problems, and most cocaine abusers also smoke cigarettes. An ideal pharmacotherapy would reduce both cigarette smoking and cocaine abuse. Buspirone (Buspar) is a clinically available, non-benzodiazepine anxiolytic medication that acts on serotonin and dopamine systems. In preclinical studies, it reduced cocaine self-administration following both acute and chronic treatment in rhesus monkeys. The present study evaluated the effectiveness of chronic buspirone treatment on self-administration of intravenous (IV) nicotine and IV nicotine+cocaine combinations. Five cocaine-experienced adult rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta) were trained to self-administer nicotine or nicotine+cocaine combinations, and food pellets (1 g) during four 1-h daily sessions under a second-order schedule of reinforcement (FR 2 (VR16:S)). Each nicotine+cocaine combination maintained significantly higher levels of drug self-administration than nicotine or cocaine alone (P<0.05-0.001). Buspirone (0.032-0.56 mg/kg/h) was administered IV through one lumen of a double-lumen catheter every 20 min for 23 h each day, for 7-10 consecutive days. Each 7-10-day sequence of buspirone treatment was followed by saline-control treatment for at least 3 days until food- and drug-maintained responding returned to baseline. Buspirone dose-dependently reduced responding maintained by nicotine alone (0.001-0.1 mg/kg/inj; P<0.01) and by nicotine (0.001 or 0.0032 mg/kg/inj)+cocaine combinations (0.0032 mg/kg/inj; P<0.05-0.001) with no significant effects on food-maintained responding. We conclude that buspirone selectively attenuates the reinforcing effects of nicotine alone and nicotine+cocaine polydrug combinations in a nonhuman primate model of drug self-administration.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23337868      PMCID: PMC3656370          DOI: 10.1038/npp.2013.25

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuropsychopharmacology        ISSN: 0893-133X            Impact factor:   7.853


  79 in total

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Review 5.  Dopamine D3 receptor partial agonists and antagonists as potential drug abuse therapeutic agents.

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  11 in total

1.  Effects of oral and intravenous administration of buspirone on food-cocaine choice in socially housed male cynomolgus monkeys.

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2.  Evaluating Nicotine Craving, Withdrawal, and Substance Use as Mediators of Smoking Cessation in Cocaine- and Methamphetamine-Dependent Patients.

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Review 4.  Interactions between nicotine and drugs of abuse: a review of preclinical findings.

Authors:  Stephen J Kohut
Journal:  Am J Drug Alcohol Abuse       Date:  2016-09-02       Impact factor: 3.829

5.  The effects of buspirone on occupancy of dopamine receptors and the rat gambling task.

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6.  Effects of L-methamphetamine treatment on cocaine- and food-maintained behavior in rhesus monkeys.

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Review 7.  Beyond small-molecule SAR: using the dopamine D3 receptor crystal structure to guide drug design.

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Authors:  Nancy K Mello; Peter A Fivel; Stephen J Kohut; F Ivy Carroll
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Review 9.  Critical needs in drug discovery for cessation of alcohol and nicotine polysubstance abuse.

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10.  High Affinity Dopamine D3 Receptor (D3R)-Selective Antagonists Attenuate Heroin Self-Administration in Wild-Type but not D3R Knockout Mice.

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Journal:  J Med Chem       Date:  2015-07-23       Impact factor: 7.446

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