Center for Behavioral Neuroscience, Department of Psychology, American University, Washington, DC 20016, United States.
Center for Behavioral Neuroscience, Department of Psychology, American University, Washington, DC 20016, United States.
Pharmacol Biochem Behav. 2018 Jul;170:56-63. doi: 10.1016/j.pbb.2018.05.005. Epub 2018 May 10.
Previous research has shown that diets high in fat and sugar [a.k.a., Western diets (WD)] can impair performance of rats on hippocampal-dependent learning and memory problems, an effect that is accompanied by selective increases in hippocampal blood brain barrier (BBB) permeability. Based on these types of findings, it has been proposed that overeating of a WD (and its resulting obesity) may be, in part, a consequence of impairments in these anatomical substrates and cognitive processes. Given that drug use (and addiction) represents another behavioral excess, the present experiments assessed if similar outcomes might occur with drug exposure by evaluating the effects of cocaine administration on hippocampal-dependent memory and on the integrity of the BBB. Experiment 1 of the present series of studies found that systemic cocaine administration in rats also appears to have disruptive effects on the same hippocampal-dependent learning and memory mechanism that has been proposed to underlie the inhibition of food intake. Experiment 2 demonstrated that the same regimen of cocaine exposure that produced disruptions in learning and memory in Experiment 1 also produced increased BBB permeability in the hippocampus, but not in the striatum. Although the predominant focus of previous research investigating the etiologies of substance use and abuse has been on the brain circuits that underlie the motivational properties of drugs, the current investigation implicates the possible involvement of hippocampal memory systems in such behaviors. It is important to note that these positions are not mutually exclusive and that neuroadaptations in these two circuits might occur in parallel that generate dysregulated drug use in a manner similar to that of excessive eating.
先前的研究表明,高脂肪和高糖的饮食(即西方饮食)会损害大鼠在海马依赖型学习和记忆问题上的表现,这种影响伴随着海马血脑屏障(BBB)通透性的选择性增加。基于这些类型的发现,有人提出,过量摄入 WD(及其导致的肥胖)可能部分是由于这些解剖学基质和认知过程受损所致。鉴于药物使用(和成瘾)代表了另一种行为过度,本实验通过评估可卡因给药对海马依赖型记忆和 BBB 完整性的影响,评估了药物暴露是否会产生类似的结果。本系列研究的实验 1 发现,系统给予可卡因也似乎对同样的海马依赖型学习和记忆机制产生破坏作用,该机制被认为是抑制食物摄入的基础。实验 2 表明,在实验 1 中导致学习和记忆中断的可卡因暴露相同方案,也导致了海马体 BBB 通透性增加,但纹状体没有增加。虽然先前研究物质使用和滥用病因的主要焦点一直是药物动机特性所依赖的大脑回路,但目前的研究表明,海马记忆系统可能参与了这些行为。需要注意的是,这些立场并非相互排斥,这两个回路中的神经适应可能会同时发生,以类似于过度进食的方式导致药物使用失调。