| Literature DB >> 25171082 |
Sanders A McDougall1, Joseph A Pipkin, Taleen Der-Ghazarian, Anthony M Cortez, Arnold Gutierrez, Ryan J Lee, Sandra Carbajal, Alena Mohd-Yusof.
Abstract
The aim of the present study was to determine the strength and persistence of cocaine-induced conditioned activity in young and adult rats. A one-trial protocol has proven useful for studying the ontogeny of psychostimulant-induced behavioral sensitization; therefore, a similar procedure was used to examine conditioned activity. On postnatal day (PD) 19 or PD 80, rats were injected with saline or cocaine in either a novel test chamber or the home cage. After various drug abstinence intervals (1-21 days), rats were injected with saline and returned to the test chamber, where conditioned activity was assessed. In a separate experiment, we examined whether cocaine-induced conditioned activity was a consequence of Pavlovian conditioning or a failure to habituate to the test environment. The results indicated that adult rats showed strong one-trial conditioned activity that persisted for at least 21 days, whereas young rats did not show a conditioned locomotor response. The conditioned activity shown by adult rats did not result from a failure to habituate to the cocaine-paired environment. These results indicate that cocaine-paired contextual stimuli differentially affect behavior depending on the age of the animal. The data obtained from adult rats have potential translational relevance for humans because a single environment-drug pairing caused long-term alterations in behavior.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25171082 PMCID: PMC4151127 DOI: 10.1097/FBP.0000000000000085
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Pharmacol ISSN: 0955-8810 Impact factor: 2.293