Oleson Erik B, Cachope Roger, Fitoussi Aurelie, Tsutsui Kimberly, Wu Sharon, Gallegos Jacqueline A, Cheer Joseph F
1] Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA [2] University of Colorado Denver, Denver, CO, USA.
Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Neuropsychopharmacology. 2014 May;39(6):1441-52. doi: 10.1038/npp.2013.340. Epub 2013 Dec 18.
The ability to discern temporally pertinent environmental events is essential for the generation of adaptive behavior in conventional tasks, and our overall survival. Cannabinoids are thought to disrupt temporally controlled behaviors by interfering with dedicated brain timing networks. Cannabinoids also increase dopamine release within the mesolimbic system, a neural pathway generally implicated in timing behavior. Timing can be assessed using fixed-interval (FI) schedules, which reinforce behavior on the basis of time. To date, it remains unknown how cannabinoids modulate dopamine release when responding under FI conditions, and for that matter, how subsecond dopamine release is related to time in these tasks. In the present study, we hypothesized that cannabinoids would accelerate timing behavior in an FI task while concurrently augmenting a temporally relevant pattern of dopamine release. To assess this possibility, we measured subsecond dopamine concentrations in the nucleus accumbens while mice responded for food under the influence of the cannabinoid agonist WIN 55,212-2 in an FI task. Our data reveal that accumbal dopamine concentrations decrease proportionally to interval duration--suggesting that dopamine encodes time in FI tasks. We further demonstrate that WIN 55,212-2 dose-dependently increases dopamine release and accelerates a temporal behavioral response pattern in a CB1 receptor-dependent manner--suggesting that cannabinoid receptor activation modifies timing behavior, in part, by augmenting time-engendered patterns of dopamine release. Additional investigation uncovered a specific role for endogenous cannabinoid tone in timing behavior, as elevations in 2-arachidonoylglycerol, but not anandamide, significantly accelerated the temporal response pattern in a manner akin to WIN 55,212-2.
辨别与时间相关的环境事件的能力对于在传统任务中产生适应性行为以及我们的整体生存至关重要。大麻素被认为通过干扰专门的大脑计时网络来破坏受时间控制的行为。大麻素还会增加中脑边缘系统内的多巴胺释放,这是一条通常与计时行为有关的神经通路。计时可以使用固定间隔(FI)时间表来评估,该时间表根据时间来强化行为。迄今为止,尚不清楚大麻素在FI条件下做出反应时如何调节多巴胺释放,以及在这些任务中,亚秒级的多巴胺释放与时间是如何相关的。在本研究中,我们假设大麻素会在FI任务中加速计时行为,同时增强与时间相关的多巴胺释放模式。为了评估这种可能性,我们在FI任务中测量了小鼠在大麻素激动剂WIN 55,212-2影响下对食物做出反应时伏隔核中亚秒级的多巴胺浓度。我们的数据显示,伏隔核中的多巴胺浓度与间隔持续时间成比例下降——这表明多巴胺在FI任务中编码时间。我们进一步证明,WIN 55,212-2以剂量依赖的方式增加多巴胺释放,并以CB1受体依赖的方式加速时间行为反应模式——这表明大麻素受体激活部分地通过增强由时间产生的多巴胺释放模式来改变计时行为。进一步的研究发现内源性大麻素张力在计时行为中具有特定作用,因为2-花生四烯酸甘油酯(而非花生四烯乙醇胺)的升高以类似于WIN 55,212-2的方式显著加速了时间反应模式。