| Literature DB >> 27777560 |
Laura H Corbit1, Patricia H Janak2.
Abstract
Previous work has demonstrated that goal-directed control of alcohol-seeking and other drug-related behaviors is reduced following extended self-administration and drug exposure. Here, we examined how the magnitude of stimulus influences on responding changes across similar training and drug exposure. Rats self-administered alcohol or sucrose for 2 or 8 weeks. Previous work has shown that 8 weeks, but not 2 weeks of self-administration produces habitual alcohol seeking. Next, all animals received equivalent Pavlovian conditioning sessions where a discrete stimulus predicted the delivery of alcohol or sucrose. Finally, the impact of the stimuli on ongoing instrumental responding was examined in a Pavlovian-instrumental transfer (PIT) test. While a significant PIT effect was observed following 2 weeks of either alcohol or sucrose self-administration, the magnitude of this effect was greater following 8 weeks of training. The specificity of the PIT effect appeared unchanged by extended training. While it is well established that evaluation of the outcome of responding contributes less to behavioral control following extended training and/or drug exposure, our data indicate that reward-predictive stimuli have a stronger contribution to responding after extended training. Together, these findings provide insight into the factors that control behavior after extended drug use, which will be important for developing effective methods for controlling and ideally reducing these behaviors.Entities:
Keywords: Pavlovian–instrumental transfer; ethanol; habit learning; outcome devaluation; stimuli
Year: 2016 PMID: 27777560 PMCID: PMC5056168 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2016.00169
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Instrumental response rates for alcohol prior to PIT testing in Experiment 1.
| Group | Lever presses | Earned alcohol | g/kg ethanol |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2-week | 94.2 (11.3) | 2.9 (0.37) ml | 0.55 (0.07) |
| 8-week | 83.1 (10.9) | 3.1 (0.39) ml | 0.45 (0.06) |
Mean (SEM) lever-press responses, volume of alcohol consumed, and gram/kilogram ethanol levels for the final 3 days of instrumental training.
Figure 1Pavlovian–instrumental transfer is greater following extended alcohol self-administration. (A) Mean magazine entries (+SEM) during the pre-CS (baseline) period and presentations of the CS+ and CS− across days of Pavlovian training for the 2- and 8-week training groups. (B) Mean lever presses (+SEM) during the pre-CS (baseline) period and presentations of the CS+ and CS− during the Pavlovian–instrumental transfer test. The excitatory effects of the CS+ are greater for the 8-week group. *indicates responding during the CS+ is greater than during the baseline period, p < 0.05. **indicates responding is greater for the 8-week group than for the 2-week group, p < 0.05.
Instrumental response rates for sucrose prior to PIT testing in Experiment 2.
| Group | Lever presses | Earned sucrose |
|---|---|---|
| 2-week | 68.6 (7.9) | 2.9 (0.35) ml |
| 8-week | 94.4 (19.1) | 3.3 (0.79) ml |
Mean (SEM) lever-press responses and volume of sucrose consumed for the final 3 days of instrumental training.
Figure 2Pavlovian–instrumental transfer is greater following extended sucrose self-administration. (A) Mean magazine entries (+SEM) during the pre-CS (baseline) period and presentations of the CS+ and CS− across days of Pavlovian training for the 2- and 8-week training groups. (B) Mean lever presses (+SEM) during the pre-CS (baseline) period and presentations of the CS+ and CS− during the Pavlovian–instrumental transfer test. The excitatory effects of the CS+ are greater for the 8-week group. *indicates responding during the CS+ is greater than during the baseline period, p < 0.05. **indicates responding is greater for the 8-week group than for the 2-week group, p < 0.05.
Instrumental response rates for alcohol prior to PIT testing in Experiment 3.
| Group | Lever presses | Earned alcohol | g/kg |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2-week | 97.8 (14.4) | 3.0 (0.39) ml | 0.51 (0.09) |
| 8-week | 106.6 (8.9) | 3.6 (0.38) ml | 0.68 (0.07) |
Mean (SEM) lever-press responses, volume of alcohol consumed, and gram/kilogram ethanol levels for the final 3 days of instrumental training.
Figure 3The magnitude of the Pavlovian–instrumental transfer effect is greater following extended training, but the specificity is unchanged. (A) Mean magazine entries (+SEM) during the pre-CS (baseline) period and presentations of the alcohol-predictive (E+) and sucrose-predictive (S+) stimuli across days of Pavlovian training for the 2- and 8-week training groups. (B) Mean lever presses (+SEM) during the pre-CS (baseline) period and presentations of the E+ and S+ during the Pavlovian–instrumental transfer test. The excitatory effects of the E+ are greater for the 8-week group. While S+ enhanced responding from baseline, this effect did not differ for the 2- and 8-week groups. *indicates responding during the CS+ is greater than during the baseline period, p < 0.05. **indicates responding is greater for the 8-week group than for the 2-week group, p < 0.05. #indicates responding is greater during E+ than during S+, p < 0.05.