Rogers Jason L, See Ronald E
Department of Neurosciences, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC 29425, USA.
Neurobiol Learn Mem. 2007 May;87(4):688-92. doi: 10.1016/j.nlm.2007.01.003. Epub 2007 Mar 6.
Recent evidence suggests that the hippocampus may have a functional role in mediating relapse to cocaine-seeking behavior. Based on the importance of the ventral CA subfields in mediating reward, the present experiment determined the effects of temporary inactivation of the ventral hippocampus on reinstatement of cocaine-seeking in a rodent model of relapse. Male, Sprague-Dawley rats self-administered i.v. cocaine (0.6 mg/kg/infusion) in the presence of discrete conditioned cues (tone+light) in daily 2-h sessions for ten days. Following seven days of extinction sessions in which neither cues nor drug were available, rats underwent four reinstatement tests in a counterbalanced, within-subjects design. Bilateral microinjections of GABA receptor agonists (baclofen/muscimol (B/M; 1.0 mM/0.1 mM) [corrected] into the ventral hippocampus significantly attenuated cue-induced and cocaine-primed reinstatement compared with vehicle microinjections in the same rats. In contrast, injections just outside the ventral hippocampus did not block either form of reinstatement. Furthermore, inactivation failed to affect responding for food reinforcement, baseline extinction responding, or locomotor activity. These data indicate that the ventral hippocampus plays an important role in the relapse to cocaine-seeking behavior and may interact with key limbic structures previously implicated in cocaine addiction.
最近的证据表明,海马体可能在介导可卡因寻求行为的复发中发挥功能性作用。基于腹侧CA子区域在介导奖赏中的重要性,本实验确定了腹侧海马体暂时失活对啮齿类动物复发模型中可卡因寻求行为恢复的影响。雄性Sprague-Dawley大鼠在每天2小时的实验中,在离散的条件性线索(音调+灯光)存在的情况下静脉注射可卡因(0.6毫克/千克/次),持续十天。在进行七天的消退实验(期间既没有线索也没有药物)后,大鼠在一种平衡的、被试内设计中接受了四次恢复测试。与在相同大鼠中注射溶剂相比,向腹侧海马体双侧微量注射GABA受体激动剂(巴氯芬/蝇蕈醇(B/M;1.0毫摩尔/0.1毫摩尔)[已校正])显著减弱了线索诱导的和可卡因引发的恢复。相比之下,在腹侧海马体外侧的注射并没有阻断任何一种形式的恢复。此外,失活并未影响对食物强化的反应、基线消退反应或运动活动。这些数据表明,腹侧海马体在可卡因寻求行为的复发中起重要作用,并且可能与先前涉及可卡因成瘾的关键边缘结构相互作用。