CHANGES IN EXTRACELLULAR DOPAMINE IN THE NUCLEUS ACCUMBENS DURING INITIATION OF INTRAVENOUS HEROIN SELF-ADMINISTRATION DETERMINED BY IN VIVO MICRODIALYSIS

1996 ◽  
Vol 7 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 84
Author(s):  
S PETRUZZI ◽  
F CIRULLI ◽  
G LAVIOLA
2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alex B. Kawa ◽  
Alec C. Valenta ◽  
Robert T. Kennedy ◽  
Terry E. Robinson

Recent studies suggest that the temporal pattern of drug use (pharmacokinetics) has a profound effect on the ability of self-administered cocaine to produce addiction-like behavior in rodents, and to change the brain. To further address this issue, we compared the effects of Long Access (LgA) cocaine self-administration, which is widely used to model the transition to addiction, with Intermittent Access (IntA), which is thought to better reflect the pattern of drug use in humans, on the ability of self-administered cocaine to increase dopamine (DA) overflow in the core of the nucleus accumbens (using in vivo microdialysis), and to produce addiction-like behavior. IntA experience was more effective than LgA in producing addiction-like behavior- a drug experience-dependent increase in motivation for cocaine assessed using behavioral economic procedures, and cue-induced reinstatement, despite much less total drug consumption. There were no group differences in basal levels of DA in dialysate, but a single self-administered IV injection of cocaine increased DA in the core of the nucleus accumbens to a greater extent in rats with prior IntA experience than those with LgA or Short Access (ShA) experience, and the latter two groups did not differ. Furthermore, high motivation for cocaine was associated with a high DA response. Thus, IntA, but not LgA, produced both incentive and DA sensitization. This is consistent with the notion that a hyper-responsive dopaminergic system may contribute to the transition from casual patterns of drug use to the problematic patterns that define addiction.


1989 ◽  
Vol 498 (1) ◽  
pp. 199-203 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yasmin L. Hurd ◽  
Friedbert Weiss ◽  
George F. Koob ◽  
Nils-Erik And ◽  
Urban Ungerstedt

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 470
Author(s):  
Kadri Kõiv ◽  
Kai Tiitsaar ◽  
Karita Laugus ◽  
Jaanus Harro

Fifty-kHz ultrasonic vocalizations (USVs) in response to an imitation of rough-and-tumble play (‘tickling’) have been associated with positive affective states and rewarding experience in the rat. This USV response can be used as a measure of inter-individual differences in positive affect. We have previously shown that rats with persistently low positive affectivity are more vulnerable to the effects of chronic variable stress (CVS). To examine whether these differential responses are associated with dopaminergic neurotransmission in the nucleus accumbens (NAc), juvenile male Wistar rats were categorized as of high or low positive affectivity (HC and LC, respectively), and after reaching adulthood, extracellular dopamine (DA) levels in the NAc shell were measured using in vivo microdialysis after three weeks of CVS. Baseline levels of DA were compared as well as the response to K+-induced depolarization and the effect of glial glutamate transporter EAAT2 inhibition by 4 mM l-trans-pyrrolidine-2,4-dicarboxylate (PDC). DA baseline levels were higher in control LC-rats, and stress significantly lowered the DA content in LC-rats. An interaction of stress and affectivity appeared in response to depolarization where stress increased the DA output in HC-rats whereas it decreased it in LC-rats. These results show that NAc-shell DA is differentially regulated in response to stress in animals with high and low positive affect.


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