Department of Neurochemistry, Institute of Psychiatry and Neurology, 9 Sobieskiego St., 02-957 Warsaw, Poland.
Department of Pharmacology and Physiology of the Nervous System, Institute of Psychiatry and Neurology, 9 Sobieskiego St., 02-957, Warsaw, Poland.
Behav Brain Res. 2019 Dec 30;376:112187. doi: 10.1016/j.bbr.2019.112187. Epub 2019 Aug 29.
Measuring ultrasonic vocalizations (USVs) allows studying psychoactive drug use-related affective states in laboratory rats and may help understand changes underlying the progress of addictions. We aimed at finding an effective scheme for amphetamine self-administration training in rats, identifying factors affecting their anticipatory and drug-evoked, frequency-modulated 50-kHz USV responses, and verifying whether the rewarding action of amphetamine promotes current drug intake during the training. Therefore, we monitored amphetamine intake and anticipatory and drug-evoked USVs in two rat cohorts trained using two different training schemes. Then we retrospectively divided these cohorts into low-amphetamine and high-amphetamine intake subsets and analyzed their frequency-modulated 50-kHz USV responses accordingly. Anticipatory (i.e., drug-context-related) USVs as well as USVs induced by self-administration training-related non-pharmacological manipulations (tested in an additional rat group) showed surprisingly high call rates but faded spontaneously relatively quickly. Only the scheme employing short cycles of training sessions (two instead of six) and intermittent instead of continuous intra-session drug availability yielded long-lasting escalation of amphetamine intake in a sizable subset. This subset showed high initial amphetamine-evoked USV call rate, which suggests that a strong rewarding action of the drug early in the SA training favors intake escalation. A major decrease in the drug-evoked USVs during advanced training indicated the emergence of tolerance to the rewarding action in these rats, a phenomenon that is characteristic of addiction. Frequency-modulated 50-kHz rat USVs are a good index of the rewarding action of amphetamine at the absence of USVs induced by drug context and other training-related factors.
测量超声发声(USVs)可以研究实验室大鼠中与精神活性药物使用相关的情感状态,并有助于理解成瘾进展背后的变化。我们旨在找到一种有效的安非他命自我给药训练方案,确定影响大鼠预期和药物诱发的、调频 50-kHz USV 反应的因素,并验证安非他命的奖赏作用是否会促进训练期间的当前药物摄入。因此,我们监测了两批大鼠的安非他命摄入和预期及药物诱发的 USVs,这两批大鼠使用两种不同的训练方案进行了训练。然后,我们回顾性地将这些队列分为低安非他命和高安非他命摄入子队列,并相应地分析了它们的调频 50-kHz USV 反应。预期的(即与药物相关的)USVs 以及与自我给药训练相关的非药理学操作(在另一个大鼠组中进行测试)诱导的 USVs 显示出惊人的高叫声率,但很快自发地消失。只有采用短周期训练课程(两个而不是六个)和间歇性而不是连续性的课程内药物供应的方案才能使相当大一部分大鼠的安非他命摄入持续增加。该子队列表现出初始安非他命诱发 USV 叫声率高,这表明药物在 SA 训练早期的强烈奖赏作用有利于摄入增加。在高级训练期间,药物诱发的 USVs 大量减少表明这些大鼠对奖赏作用产生了耐受性,这是成瘾的一个特征。调频 50-kHz 大鼠 USVs 是安非他命奖赏作用的一个很好的指标,而没有药物诱导的 USVs 以及其他与训练相关的因素。