O'Neal Timothy J, Nooney Marlaena N, Thien Katie, Ferguson Susan M
Graduate Program in Neuroscience, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, 98195, USA.
Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, 98195, USA.
Neuropsychopharmacology. 2020 Jul;45(8):1251-1262. doi: 10.1038/s41386-019-0571-9. Epub 2019 Nov 20.
Opioid addiction has been declared a public health emergency, with fatal overdoses following relapse reaching epidemic proportions and disease-associated costs continuing to escalate. Relapse is often triggered by re-exposure to drug-associated cues, and though the neural substrates responsible for relapse in vulnerable individuals remains ambiguous, the nucleus accumbens (NAc) has been shown to play a central role. NAc direct and indirect pathway medium spiny neurons (dMSNs and iMSNs) can have oppositional control over reward-seeking and associative learning and are critically involved in reinstatement of psychostimulant-seeking. However, whether these pathways similarly regulate reinstatement of opioid-seeking remains unknown, as is their role in modulating motivation to take opioids. Here, we describe a method for classifying addiction severity in outbred rats following intermittent-access heroin self-administration that identifies subgroups as addiction-vulnerable (high-risk) or addiction-resistant (low-risk). Using dual viral-mediated gene transfer of DREADDs, we show that transient inactivation of dMSNs or activation of iMSNs is capable of suppressing cue-induced reinstatement of heroin-seeking in high- but not low-risk rats. Surprisingly, however, the motivation to self-administer heroin was unchanged, indicating a divergence in the encoding of heroin-taking and heroin-seeking in rats. We further show that transient activation of dMSNs or inactivation of iMSNs exacerbates cue-induced reinstatement of heroin-seeking in high- but not low-risk rats, again with no effect on motivation. These findings demonstrate a critical role for dMSNs and iMSNs in encoding vulnerability to reinstatement of heroin-seeking and provide insight into the specific neurobiological changes that occur in vulnerable groups following heroin self-administration.
阿片类药物成瘾已被宣布为公共卫生紧急事件,复吸后的致命过量用药已达到流行程度,且与疾病相关的成本持续攀升。复吸通常由再次接触与药物相关的线索引发,尽管导致易感个体复吸的神经基质仍不明确,但伏隔核(NAc)已被证明发挥着核心作用。伏隔核直接和间接通路的中等棘状神经元(dMSN和iMSN)对奖赏寻求和联想学习可能具有相反的控制作用,并在精神兴奋剂寻求行为的恢复中起关键作用。然而,这些通路是否同样调节阿片类药物寻求行为的恢复尚不清楚,它们在调节服用阿片类药物的动机方面所起的作用也不清楚。在这里,我们描述了一种在杂种大鼠间歇性接触海洛因自我给药后对成瘾严重程度进行分类的方法,该方法将亚组识别为成瘾易感(高风险)或成瘾抵抗(低风险)。使用双病毒介导的DREADDs基因转移,我们发现短暂失活dMSN或激活iMSN能够抑制高风险而非低风险大鼠中线索诱导的海洛因寻求行为的恢复。然而,令人惊讶的是,自我给药海洛因的动机没有改变,这表明大鼠在服用海洛因和寻求海洛因的编码上存在差异。我们进一步表明,短暂激活dMSN或失活iMSN会加剧高风险而非低风险大鼠中线索诱导的海洛因寻求行为的恢复,同样对动机没有影响。这些发现证明了dMSN和iMSN在编码海洛因寻求行为恢复的易感性方面的关键作用,并为海洛因自我给药后弱势群体中发生的特定神经生物学变化提供了见解。