Perinatal protein deprivation facilitates morphine cross-sensitization to cocaine and enhances ΔFosB expression in adult rats

•Early malnutrition may increase vulnerability to drug abuse in adult animals.•D-rats showed greater responsiveness to rewarding effects of cocaine.•D-rats elicited morphine cross-sensitization to the rewarding effects of cocaine.•D-rats significantly increased ΔFosB levels in the brain reward netwo...

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Veröffentlicht in:Behavioural brain research 2017-08, Vol.333, p.203-210
Hauptverfasser: Perondi, María Cecilia, Gutiérrez, María Cecilia, Valdomero, Analía, Cuadra, Gabriel Ricardo
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Early malnutrition may increase vulnerability to drug abuse in adult animals.•D-rats showed greater responsiveness to rewarding effects of cocaine.•D-rats elicited morphine cross-sensitization to the rewarding effects of cocaine.•D-rats significantly increased ΔFosB levels in the brain reward network.•Undernutrition as an additional risk factor in the etiology of addictive processes. Previous studies have indicated that neural changes induced by early nutritional insult cause an altered response to pharmacological treatments, including addictive drugs. This study evaluates the influence of perinatal protein malnutrition in developing cross-sensitization to cocaine-induced rewarding effects in animals pre-exposed to morphine. Different groups of well-nourished (C-rats) and protein-deprived animals (D-rats) were treated twice a day for three days with increasing doses of morphine or with saline. After 3days, the incentive motivational effects of cocaine were assessed in a Conditioned Place Preference paradigm in both groups. In saline pre-treated animals, dose-response curves to cocaine revealed a conditioning effect in D-rats at doses of 5, 7.5 and 10mg/kg, while this effect was observed in C-rats only with 10 and 15mg/kg. Furthermore, when animals of both groups were pre-treated with escalating doses of morphine, cross-sensitization to the conditioning effect of cocaine was elicited only in D-rats with low doses of cocaine (5 and 7.5mg/kg). In contrast, under the same experimental conditions, C-rats show no cross-sensitization. To correlate this differential rewarding response with a molecular substrate linked to the behavioral changes observed after repeated drug exposure, ΔFosB expression was assessed in different brain regions. D-rats showed a significant increase in this transcription factor in the nucleus accumbens, amygdala and medial prefrontal cortex. These results demonstrated that perinatal protein deprivation facilitates rewarding effects and the development of cross-sensitization to cocaine, which correlates with an upregulation of ΔFosB in brain areas related to the reward circuitry.
ISSN:0166-4328
1872-7549
DOI:10.1016/j.bbr.2017.06.051