The nucleus accumbens shell in reinstatement and extinction of drug seeking

The contexts where drugs are self‐administered have important control over relapse and extinction of drug‐seeking behavior. The nucleus accumbens shell (AcbSh) is essential to this contextual control over drug‐seeking behavior. It has been consistently implicated in both the expression of context‐in...

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Veröffentlicht in:The European journal of neuroscience 2019-08, Vol.50 (3), p.2014-2022
Hauptverfasser: Gibson, Gabrielle D., Millan, E. Zayra, McNally, Gavan P.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The contexts where drugs are self‐administered have important control over relapse and extinction of drug‐seeking behavior. The nucleus accumbens shell (AcbSh) is essential to this contextual control over drug‐seeking behavior. It has been consistently implicated in both the expression of context‐induced reinstatement and the expression of extinction, across a variety of drug classes and other rewards. Here, we review the evidence linking AcbSh to the extinction and reinstatement of drug seeking. We consider whether this dual role can be linked to known heterogeneities in AcbSh cell types, their major afferents, and their major efferents. We show that although these heterogeneities are each important and can determine extinction vs. reinstatement, they do not seem adequate to explain the body of findings from the behavioral literature. Rather, we suggest that this functional specialization of AcbSh may be more profitably viewed in terms of the segregation and compartmentalization of AcbSh channels. Accumbens shell (AcbSh) contributes to contextual control over both the extinction and reinstatement of drug seeking. These dual roles are not consistent with classic anatomical distinctions between AcbSh cell type, AcbSh sub‐region, their inputs or outputs. These dual roles are consistent with parallel channels of information flow through distinct AcbSh ensembles.
ISSN:0953-816X
1460-9568
DOI:10.1111/ejn.14084