| Literature DB >> 28583866 |
Adebobola Imeh-Nathaniel1, Natalia Rincon2, Vasiliki Bessie Orfanakos2, Leanne Brechtel2, Leah Wormack2, Erika Richardson2, Robert Huber3, Thomas I Nathaniel4.
Abstract
The worth of crayfish as a model system for studies of addiction was not previously recognized because a drug-reward phenomenon had not been documented in this model system. In our previous experiments, we demonstrate that the crayfish natural reward pathways are sensitive to human drugs of abuse. This finding supports crayfish as a suitable model to characterize specific behaviors that are relevant in drug addiction research, and the current study builds on our previous findings. The aim of the present study was to investigate unconditioned neurobehavioral effects of repeated treatment regimens using cocaine, morphine, and methamphetamine for three consecutive days. We analyzed mobility, immobility and characterized stereotypic behaviors following intracardial infusions of 2.0μg/g or 10.0μg/g doses of cocaine, morphine, and methamphetamine for three days. The results showed that systemic cocaine, morphine, and methamphetamine increased mobility at a low dose of 2.0μg/g more effectively than a high dose of 10.0μg/g, while simultaneously showing that the high dose exerted a more prominent effect in increasing immobility. Moreover, systemic cocaine, morphine, and methamphetamine injections have discerning effects towards a group of defined unconditioned stereotyped behavioral patterns associated with each drug, rather than a shared universal behavioral effect. These findings provide insight into the behavioral and pharmacological basis responsible for the unconditioned effects of these drugs in crayfish.Entities:
Keywords: Cocaine; Immobility; Methamphetamine; Mobility; Morphine; Stereotype behavior
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28583866 DOI: 10.1016/j.bbr.2017.05.069
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Brain Res ISSN: 0166-4328 Impact factor: 3.332