201. A role for corticotropin-releasing factor, but not corticosterone, in acute food-deprivation-induced reinstatement of heroin seeking in rats.
- Author
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Shalev U, Finnie PS, Quinn T, Tobin S, and Wahi P
- Subjects
- Adrenalectomy, Animals, Cocaine administration & dosage, Extinction, Psychological, Male, Nucleus Accumbens physiology, Rats, Rats, Long-Evans, Ventral Tegmental Area physiology, Corticosterone physiology, Corticotropin-Releasing Hormone physiology, Food Deprivation, Heroin administration & dosage, Self Administration
- Abstract
Rationale: Acute 1-day food deprivation reinstates heroin seeking in rats via a leptin-dependent mechanism. However, leptin has no effect on footshock- or heroin-priming-induced reinstatement of drug seeking. These data may indicate that the neuronal systems underlying food-deprivation-induced reinstatement are dissociable from those involved in reinstatement induced by footshock stress., Objectives: We used the reinstatement procedure to examine the roles of the adrenal stress hormone, corticosterone, and brain corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) in acute food-deprivation-induced reinstatement of extinguished heroin seeking in rats., Materials and Methods: The rats were trained to press a lever for heroin (0.05-0.1 mg/kg/infusion, i.v.) for 10 days. Experiment 1: After heroin self-administration training, the rats were divided into two groups, which received either bilateral adrenalectomy surgery or sham surgery. Next, the rats were given 7-10 days of extinction training (during which lever presses were not reinforced with heroin). The rats were subsequently tested for reinstatement after acute (21 h) food deprivation. Experiment 2: After heroin self-administration and extinction training, the rats were tested for reinstatement induced by acute food deprivation. Before the test session, the rats were given intracerebroventricular injections of the CRF receptor antagonist alpha-helical CRF (0, 3, or 10 microg/rat)., Results: Adrenalectomy had no effect on the extinction behavior or acute food-deprivation-induced reinstatement of heroin seeking. The CRF receptor antagonist, alpha-helical CRF, dose-dependently blocked food-deprivation-induced reinstatement., Conclusions: The present data suggest that, as demonstrated for footshock-induced reinstatement of drug seeking, brain CRF, but not corticosterone, plays a critical role in acute food-deprivation-induced reinstatement of heroin seeking.
- Published
- 2006
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