| Literature DB >> 26639425 |
Weisheng Chen1, Yiqi Wang2, Anna Sun3, Linyi Zhou4, Wenjin Xu1, Huaqiang Zhu1, Dingding Zhuang1, Miaojun Lai1, Fuqiang Zhang1, Wenhua Zhou5, Huifen Liu6.
Abstract
Infralimbic cortex (IL) is proposed to suppress cocaine seeking after extinction, but whether the IL regulates the extinction and reinstatement of heroin-seeking behavior is unknown. To address this issue, the male SD rats were trained to self-administer heroin under a FR1 schedule for consecutive 14 days, then the rats underwent 7 daily 2h extinction session in the operant chamber. The activation of IL by microinjection PEPA, an allosteric AMPA receptor potentiator into IL before each of extinction session facilitated the extinction responding after heroin self-administration, but did not alter the locomotor activity in an open field testing environment. Other rats were first trained under a FR1 schedule for heroin self-administration for 14 days, followed by 14 days of extinction training, and reinstatement of heroin-seeking induced by cues was measured for 2h. Intra-IL microinjecting of PEPA at 15min prior to test inhibited the reinstatement of heroin-seeking induced by cues. Moreover, the expression of GluR1 in the IL and NAc remarkably increased after treatment with PEPA during the reinstatement. These finding suggested that activation of glutamatergic projection from IL to NAc shell may be involved in the extinction and reinstatement of heroin-seeking.Entities:
Keywords: AMPA receptor; Extinction; Frontal cortex; Heroin; Inhibitory memory
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26639425 DOI: 10.1016/j.neulet.2015.11.024
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurosci Lett ISSN: 0304-3940 Impact factor: 3.046