Caine S Barak, Thomsen Morgane, Gabriel Kara I, Berkowitz Jill S, Gold Lisa H, Koob George F, Tonegawa Susumu, Zhang Jianhua, Xu Ming
Alcohol and Drug Abuse Research Center, McLean Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Belmont, Massachusetts 02478, USA.
J Neurosci. 2007 Nov 28;27(48):13140-50. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2284-07.2007.
Evidence suggests a critical role for dopamine in the reinforcing effects of cocaine in rats and primates. However, self-administration has been less often studied in the mouse species, and, to date, "knock-out" of individual dopamine-related genes in mice has not been reported to reduce the reinforcing effects of cocaine. We studied the dopamine D1 receptor and cocaine self-administration in mice using a combination of gene-targeted mutation and pharmacological tools. Two cohorts with varied breeding and experimental histories were tested, and, in both cohorts, there was a significant decrease in the number of D1 receptor knock-out mice that met criteria for acquisition of cocaine self-administration (2 of 23) relative to wild-type mice (27 of 32). After extinction of responding with saline self-administration, dose-response studies showed that cocaine reliably and dose dependently maintained responding greater than saline in all wild-type mice but in none of the D1 receptor knock-out mice. The D1-like agonist SKF 82958 (2,3,4,5,-tetrahydro-6-chloro-7,8-dihydroxy-1-phenyl-1H-3-benzazepine hydrobromide) and the D2-like agonist quinelorane both functioned as positive reinforcers in wild-type mice but not in D1 receptor mutant mice, whereas food and intravenous injections of the opioid agonist remifentanil functioned as positive reinforcers in both genotypes. Finally, pretreatment with the D1-like antagonist SCH 23390 [R-(+)-8-chloro-2,3,4,5-tetrahydro-3-methyl-5-phenyl-1H-3-benzazepine-7-01] produced surmountable antagonism of the reinforcing effects of cocaine in the commonly used strain C57BL/6J. We conclude that D1 receptor knock-out mice do not reliably self-administer cocaine and that the D1 receptor is critical for the reinforcing effects of cocaine and other dopamine agonists, but not food or opioids, in mice.
有证据表明,多巴胺在可卡因对大鼠和灵长类动物的强化作用中起关键作用。然而,自我给药在小鼠物种中较少被研究,并且迄今为止,尚未有报道称敲除小鼠个体中与多巴胺相关的基因会降低可卡因的强化作用。我们使用基因靶向突变和药理学工具相结合的方法,研究了小鼠体内的多巴胺D1受体与可卡因自我给药之间的关系。我们测试了两个具有不同繁殖和实验历史的队列,在这两个队列中,相对于野生型小鼠(32只中有27只),达到可卡因自我给药获取标准的D1受体敲除小鼠数量(23只中有2只)均显著减少。在用生理盐水自我给药使反应消退后,剂量反应研究表明,在所有野生型小鼠中,可卡因均能可靠且剂量依赖性地维持反应,且大于生理盐水,但在所有D1受体敲除小鼠中均未出现这种情况。D1类激动剂SKF 82958(2,3,4,5 - 四氢 - 6 - 氯 - 7,8 - 二羟基 - 1 - 苯基 - 1H - 3 - 苯并氮杂卓氢溴酸盐)和D2类激动剂喹洛雷在野生型小鼠中均起到阳性强化物的作用,但在D1受体突变小鼠中则不然,而食物和静脉注射阿片类激动剂瑞芬太尼在两种基因型小鼠中均起到阳性强化物的作用。最后,在常用品系C57BL/6J中,用D1类拮抗剂SCH 23390 [R-(+)-8 - 氯 - 2,3,4,5 - 四氢 - 3 - 甲基 - 5 - 苯基 - 1H - 3 - 苯并氮杂卓 - 7 - 醇]进行预处理,可对可卡因的强化作用产生可克服的拮抗作用。我们得出结论,D1受体敲除小鼠不能可靠地自我给药可卡因,并且D1受体对可卡因和其他多巴胺激动剂在小鼠中的强化作用至关重要,但对食物或阿片类药物的强化作用则不然。