| Literature DB >> 29479311 |
Mark D Namba1, Seven E Tomek1, M Foster Olive1, Joshua S Beckmann2, Cassandra D Gipson1.
Abstract
In drug addiction, cues previously associated with drug use can produce craving and frequently trigger the resumption of drug taking in individuals vulnerable to relapse. Environmental stimuli associated with drugs or natural reinforcers can become reliably conditioned to increase behavior that was previously reinforced. In preclinical models of addiction, these cues enhance both drug self-administration and reinstatement of drug seeking. In this review, we will dissociate the roles of conditioned stimuli as reinforcers from their modulatory or discriminative functions in producing drug-seeking behavior. As well, we will examine possible differences in neurobiological encoding underlying these functional differences. Specifically, we will discuss how models of drug addiction and relapse should more systematically evaluate these different types of stimuli to better understand the neurobiology underlying craving and relapse. In this way, behavioral and pharmacotherapeutic interventions may be better tailored to promote drug use cessation outcomes and long-term abstinence.Entities:
Keywords: addiction; conditioned stimulus; discriminative stimulus; neurobiology; reinstatement; relapse
Year: 2018 PMID: 29479311 PMCID: PMC5811475 DOI: 10.3389/fnbeh.2018.00017
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Behav Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5153 Impact factor: 3.558
Summary of neurobiological mechanisms underlying CS-induced reinstatement across drug classes.
| Selective inactivation (baclofen + muscimol, tetrodotoxin, chemogenetics, or optogenetics) | NAcore↓, NAshell | GI↓ | NAcore↓, PL↓, IL↓, CeA↓, BLA↓, SN↓, VP↓ | NAcore↓, NAshell | McLaughlin and See, |
| D1 receptor antagonism | Systemic↓ | Systemic↓ | NAcore↓, NAshell | Alleweireldt et al., | |
| D1 receptor agonism | Systemic↓, NAshell↑ | Systemic↓ | Alleweireldt et al., | ||
| D2 receptor antagonism | Systemic↓ | Systemic↓ | Systemic↓ | Cervo et al., | |
| D2 receptor agonism | NAshell↑ | Systemic↓ | Schmidt et al., | ||
| Restoration of EAAT-2/GLT-1 | NAcore↓ | NAcore↓ | NAcore↓ | Knackstedt et al., | |
| mGluR2/3 agonism | Systemic↓, NAcore↓ | Systemic↓ | Systemic↓ | Systemic↓ | Bossert et al., |
| mGluR1/5 antagonism | Systemic↓, NAcore↓, dSTR | Systemic↓ | BLA↓, NAcore↓, Systemic↓ | Bespalov et al., | |
| mGluR1/5 agonism | NAcore↑ | Wang et al., | |||
| GluN2A antagonism | NAcore↓ | Gipson et al., | |||
| GlunN2B antagonism | Systemic↓ | Systemic↓ | Shen et al., | ||
| AMPAR antagonism | NAcore↓, Systemic↓ | Systemic↓ | Bäckström and Hyytiä, | ||
| MMP inhibition | NAcore↓ | NAcore↓ | NAcore↓ | Smith et al., | |
| nNOS inhibition | NAcore↓ | Smith et al., | |||
| ECS activation | Systemic↑ | Systemic↑ | Systemic↑ | De Vries et al., | |
| ECS inhibition | Systemic↓ | Systemic↓ | Systemic↓ | Systemic↓ | De Vries et al., |
When the experimental manipulation is applied either systemically or within a specific brain region, “↓” denotes decreased reinstatement, “↑” denotes increased reinstatement and “–” denotes no observed effect. “ → ” denotes a projecting pathway. Only studies employing extinction training prior to cue reinstatement are included here.
Result of combined D,
Also inhibited cue-induced food seeking. AC, anterior commissure; dAI, dorsal agranular insular area; BLA, basolateral amygdala; CeA, central amygdala; HPC, hippocampus; GI, granular insular cortex; IL, infralimbic cortex; LS, lateral septum; NAcore, nucleus accumbens core; NAshell, nucleus accumbens shell; PL, prelimbic cortex; SN, substantia nigra; vHPC, ventral hippocampus; VP, ventral pallidum.
Summary of neurobiological mechanisms underlying SD-induced reinstatement across drug classes.
| Selective inactivation (baclofen + muscimol, tetrodotoxin, chemogenetics, or optogenetics) | OFC → BLA ↓, LS → HPC↓, dHPC → LS ↓, vHPC → LS | EC → dDGub↓, vHPC → IL↓, vSub↓, vSub → NAshell, vmPFC → NAshell↓ | VP → VTA↓, VP → STN↓, BLA↓, PL↓, LH↓ | ||
| D1 receptor antagonism | Systemic↓, | NAcore | Systemic↓, NAcore↓, NAshell↓ | ||
| D1 receptor agonism | OFC↑ | NAcore↓, NAshell↓ | |||
| D2 receptor antagonism | Systemic↓ | Systemic↓ | |||
| D2 receptor agonism | |||||
| Restoration of EAAT-2/GLT-1 | |||||
| mGluR2/3 agonism | Systemic↓, | Systemic↓, NAshell↓, VTA↓ | Baptista et al., | ||
| mGluR1/5 antagonism | Systemic↓ | Martin-Fardon et al., | |||
| mGluR1/5 agonism | |||||
| GluN2A antagonism | |||||
| GlunN2B antagonism | |||||
| AMPAR antagonism | NAcore↓, NAshell↓, vCPu | BLA↓, NAshell | |||
| MMP inhibition | |||||
| nNOS inhibition | Systemic↓ | Liu and Weiss, | |||
| ECS activation | |||||
| ECS inhibition | Systemic↓ |
When the experimental manipulation is applied either systemically or within a specific brain region, “↓” denotes decreased reinstatement, “↑” denotes increased reinstatement and “–“ denotes no observed effect. “ → ” denotes a projecting pathway. Only studies employing extinction training prior to cue reinstatement are included here. Bolded references indicate the use of contextual S.
Result of combined D1 antagonist in NAshell and B/M inactivation of vmPFC.
Also inhibited cue-induced food seeking. AC, anterior commissure; Aid, agranular insular area; BLA, basolateral amygdala; CeA, central amygdala; vCPu, ventral caudate putamen; dDG.
Figure 1Dopamine-glutamate circuitry underlying CS-induced reinstatement of drug seeking. VTA dopamine (DA) input into the NAcore mediates CS-induced reinstatement. DA input into the PFC may also modulate rapid, transient glutamatergic plasticity in the NAcore in response to drug-associated CSs and mediates drug seeking behavior. DA input into the BLA may alter excitatory inputs into the NAcore and reciprocal BLA-PFC signaling. As well, DA input into the vHPC has been implicated in CS-induced reinstatement of drug seeking, and glutamatergic projections from the vHPC to the VTA may be an indirect pathway through which the HPC modulates dopaminergic input into other brain regions.
Figure 2Dopamine-glutamate circuitry underlying SD-induced reinstatement of drug seeking. VTA dopamine (DA) input into the NAcore and NAshell mediates SD-induced reinstatement. DA input into the BLA and PFC have also been implicated in SD-induced reinstatement of drug seeking. Projections from the PFC to the NAshell have been implicated in SD-induced reinstatement; however, it is not known if PFC projections to the NAcore play a specific role in SD-induced reinstatement. Likewise, it is unclear if projections from the BLA directly to the NA play a role in SD-induced reinstatement akin to CS-induced reinstatement. The dHPC receives converging input from the BLA and VTA and has been implicated in SD-induced reinstatement. Similar to CS-induced reinstatement, the vHPC communicates bidirectionally with the VTA and may modulate dopaminergic input into the NA, PFC, and BLA. As well, glutamatergic projections from the PVT to the NAshell have also been shown to be involved in SD-induced drug seeking. Dotted lines indicate unknown effects of specific projecting pathways.