Effects of repeated yohimbine administration on reinstatement of palatable food seeking: involvement of dopamine D 1 -like receptors and food-associated cues

Acute exposure to the pharmacological stressor yohimbine induces relapse to both food and drug seeking in a rat model. However, no systematic studies on the effects of chronic stress on relapse have been conducted. Because chronic stress causes changes in dopamine D -like receptor-mediated transmiss...

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Veröffentlicht in:Addiction biology 2016-11, Vol.21 (6), p.1140
Hauptverfasser: Ball, Kevin T, Miller, Leah, Sullivan, Christopher, Wells, Ashleigh, Best, Olivia, Cavanaugh, Brittany, Copus, Taylor, Corrigan, Nathan, Hawkins, Shaina, Kobbe, Krista, Schoener, Ashley, Steiger, Johnathan, Vieweg, Lauren
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Acute exposure to the pharmacological stressor yohimbine induces relapse to both food and drug seeking in a rat model. However, no systematic studies on the effects of chronic stress on relapse have been conducted. Because chronic stress causes changes in dopamine D -like receptor-mediated transmission in prefrontal cortex (a relapse node), we tested the hypothesis that chronic exposure to stress increases vulnerability to relapse via dopamine-mediated mechanisms. Additionally, to determine the role of food-conditioned cues in reinstatement of food seeking, we made discrete food-paired cues either available (CS Present) or not available (CS Absent) during extinction and reinstatement testing. Rats responded for palatable food reinforcers in daily 3-hour sessions, and the behavior was extinguished. To model chronic stress, rats were injected daily with yohimbine (0.0, 2.5, or 5.0 mg/kg; i.p.) during the first 7 days of extinction. Injections were combined with SCH-23390 (0.0, 5.0, or 10.0 µg/kg; i.p.), a D -like receptor antagonist. Rats were then tested for reinstatement of food seeking triggered by acute yohimbine (0.0, 1.0, or 2.0 mg/kg; i.p.) and pellet priming. Rats treated previously with chronic yohimbine displayed increased responding following acute yohimbine priming relative to non-chronically stressed rats, but in the CS Absent condition only. Conversely, the lower dose of chronic yohimbine caused an increase in pellet-primed reinstatement, but this effect was more pronounced in the CS Present condition. Importantly, SCH-23390 combined with repeated yohimbine injections attenuated these effects. Thus, chronic stress may increase vulnerability to relapse under specific circumstances via a dopamine D -like receptor-mediated mechanism.
ISSN:1369-1600
DOI:10.1111/adb.12287