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Adolescent cocaine exposure enhances goal-tracking behavior and impairs hippocampal cell genesis selectively in adult bred low-responder rats

Authors :
M. Julia García-Fuster
Shelly B. Flagel
Stanley J. Watson
Huda Akil
Aram Parsegian
Source :
Psychopharmacology. 234:1293-1305
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2017.

Abstract

Environmental challenges during adolescence, such as drug exposure, can cause enduring behavioral and molecular changes that contribute to life-long maladaptive behaviors, including addiction. Selectively bred high-responder (bHR) and low-responder (bLR) rats represent a unique model for assessing the long-term impact of adolescent environmental manipulations, as they inherently differ on a number of addiction-related traits. bHR rats are considered “addiction-prone,” whereas bLR rats are “addiction-resilient,” at least under baseline conditions. Moreover, relative to bLRs, bHR rats are more likely to attribute incentive motivational value to reward cues, or to “sign-track.” We utilized bHR and bLR rats to determine whether adolescent cocaine exposure can alter their inborn behavioral and neurobiological profiles, with a specific focus on Pavlovian conditioned approach behavior (i.e., sign- vs. goal-tracking) and hippocampal neurogenesis. bHR and bLR rats were administered cocaine (15 mg/kg) or saline for 7 days during adolescence (postnatal day, PND 33–39) and subsequently tested for Pavlovian conditioned approach behavior in adulthood (PND 62–75), wherein an illuminated lever (conditioned stimulus) was followed by the response-independent delivery of a food pellet (unconditioned stimulus). Behaviors directed toward the lever and the food cup were recorded as sign- and goal-tracking, respectively. Hippocampal cell genesis was evaluated on PND 77 by immunohistochemistry. Adolescent cocaine exposure impaired hippocampal cell genesis (proliferation and survival) and enhanced the inherent propensity to goal-track in adult bLR, but not bHR, rats. Adolescent cocaine exposure elicits long-lasting changes in stimulus-reward learning and enduring deficits in hippocampal neurogenesis selectively in adult bLR rats.

Details

ISSN :
14322072 and 00333158
Volume :
234
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Psychopharmacology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d65e239df11830826bcb5240b3d4f46b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00213-017-4566-0