| Literature DB >> 26279079 |
Moritz J W Schramm1, Barry J Everitt1, Amy L Milton1.
Abstract
Alcohol addiction is a problem of great societal concern, for which there is scope to improve current treatments. One potential new treatment for alcohol addiction is based on disrupting the reconsolidation of the maladaptive Pavlovian memories that can precipitate relapse to drug-seeking behavior. In alcohol self-administering rats, we investigated the effects of bidirectionally modulating adrenergic signaling on the strength of a Pavlovian cue-alcohol memory, using a behavioral procedure that isolates the specific contribution of one maladaptive Pavlovian memory to relapse, the acquisition of a new alcohol-seeking response for an alcohol-associated conditioned reinforcer. The β-adrenergic receptor antagonist propranolol, administered in conjunction with memory reactivation, persistently disrupted the memory that underlies the capacity of a previously alcohol-associated cue to act as a conditioned reinforcer. By contrast, enhancement of adrenergic signaling by administration of the adrenergic prodrug dipivefrin at reactivation increased the strength of the cue-alcohol memory and potentiated alcohol seeking. These data demonstrate the importance of adrenergic signaling in alcohol-associated memory reconsolidation, and suggest a pharmacological target for treatments aiming to prevent relapse through the disruption of maladaptive memories.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26279079 PMCID: PMC4663661 DOI: 10.1038/npp.2015.248
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuropsychopharmacology ISSN: 0893-133X Impact factor: 7.853
Figure 1A centrally active, but not peripherally active, β-adrenergic receptor antagonist disrupted the reconsolidation of a CS-alcohol memory. (a) An overview of the experimental timeline. The injection symbol represents an i.p. injection of the centrally active β-adrenergic receptor antagonist propranolol (PRO), the peripherally active β-adrenergic receptor antagonist nadolol (NAD) or vehicle (VEH) 30 min before the memory reactivation session. The numbers underneath the boxes refer to the number of sessions. (b) Administration of PRO before memory reactivation prevented a previously alcohol-associated CS from subsequently acting as a conditioned reinforcer. By contrast, administration of NAD at reactivation did not affect the CS-alcohol memory, such that the CS could subsequently act as a conditioned reinforcer in the same manner that it did for animals treated with VEH at reactivation. Asterisks denote statistically higher responding on the active than inactive lever; the dagger denotes active lever pressing that is significantly lower than the VEH control group. (c) When PRO was administered without a memory reactivation session, it did not subsequently impair the capacity of the alcohol-associated CS to act as a conditioned reinforcer, indicating that the disruption of the CS-alcohol memory with propranolol was reactivation-dependent. Asterisks denote statistically higher responding on the active than inactive lever. Data in b and c are square-root transformed and presented as means±SEM. (d) The administration of β-adrenergic receptor antagonists had no acute effect on performance during the memory reactivation session, as PRO nor NAD had any effect on the number of nosepokes made during the memory reactivation, or the number of response-contingent CS presentations earned during this session. Group sizes: (b and d) reactivated VEH=22; reactivated PRO=11; reactivated NAD=9; (c) non-reactivated VEH=13; non-reactivated PRO=13 rats per group.
Figure 2Administration of the adrenergic prodrug dipivefrin (DIP) enhanced the reconsolidation of CS-alcohol memory, increasing subsequent responding for a previously alcohol-associated conditioned reinforcer. (a) An overview of the experimental timeline. The injection symbol represents an i.p. injection of the adrenergic prodrug DIP 10 min before the memory reactivation session. The numbers underneath the boxes refer to the number of sessions. (b) Administration of DIP before the memory reactivation session enhanced subsequent responding on the lever reinforced by presentation of the previously alcohol-associated conditioned reinforcer. Asterisks denote statistically higher responding on the active than inactive lever; the dagger denotes active lever pressing that is significantly higher than the VEH control group. (c) DIP given without memory reactivation produced subsequent responding that was indistinguishable from vehicle-treated animals. Asterisks denote statistically higher responding on the active than inactive lever. Data in b and c are square-root transformed and presented as means±SEM. (d) DIP had no acute effect on performance during the memory reactivation session, as it did not affect the number of nosepoke responses made, or CS presentations earned, relative to the vehicle-treated (VEH) control group during the memory reactivation session. Group sizes: (b and d) reactivated VEH=13; reactivated DIP=14; (c) non-reactivated VEH=9; non-reactivated DIP=9 rats per group.