| Literature DB >> 26223161 |
Kevin T Ball1, Leah Miller2, Christopher Sullivan2, Ashleigh Wells2, Olivia Best2, Brittany Cavanaugh2, Taylor Copus2, Nathan Corrigan2, Shaina Hawkins2, Krista Kobbe2, Ashley Schoener2, Johnathan Steiger2, Lauren Vieweg2.
Abstract
Acute exposure to the pharmacological stressor yohimbine induces relapse to both food and drug seeking in a rat model. However, no systematic studies on the effects of chronic stress on relapse have been conducted. Because chronic stress causes changes in dopamine D1 -like receptor-mediated transmission in prefrontal cortex (a relapse node), we tested the hypothesis that chronic exposure to stress increases vulnerability to relapse via dopamine-mediated mechanisms. Additionally, to determine the role of food-conditioned cues in reinstatement of food seeking, we made discrete food-paired cues either available (CS Present) or not available (CS Absent) during extinction and reinstatement testing. Rats responded for palatable food reinforcers in daily 3-hour sessions, and the behavior was extinguished. To model chronic stress, rats were injected daily with yohimbine (0.0, 2.5, or 5.0 mg/kg; i.p.) during the first 7 days of extinction. Injections were combined with SCH-23390 (0.0, 5.0, or 10.0 µg/kg; i.p.), a D1 -like receptor antagonist. Rats were then tested for reinstatement of food seeking triggered by acute yohimbine (0.0, 1.0, or 2.0 mg/kg; i.p.) and pellet priming. Rats treated previously with chronic yohimbine displayed increased responding following acute yohimbine priming relative to non-chronically stressed rats, but in the CS Absent condition only. Conversely, the lower dose of chronic yohimbine caused an increase in pellet-primed reinstatement, but this effect was more pronounced in the CS Present condition. Importantly, SCH-23390 combined with repeated yohimbine injections attenuated these effects. Thus, chronic stress may increase vulnerability to relapse under specific circumstances via a dopamine D1 -like receptor-mediated mechanism.Entities:
Keywords: Cue; dopamine; reinstatement; relapse; stress; yohimbine
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26223161 PMCID: PMC4732934 DOI: 10.1111/adb.12287
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Addict Biol ISSN: 1355-6215 Impact factor: 4.280