Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, Medical College of Virginia Campus, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia
Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, Medical College of Virginia Campus, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia.
J Pharmacol Exp Ther. 2023 Jun;385(3):171-179. doi: 10.1124/jpet.122.001520. Epub 2023 Mar 14.
The rapid increase in e-cigarette use highlights the importance of developing relevant, predictive animal models exploring their potential health implications. The goal of the present study was to examine the abuse-related effects of brief, repeated e-cigarette aerosol exposures in rodents modeling human e-cigarette user behavior. We evaluated the discriminative stimulus effects of brief, repeated puffs of inhaled nicotine in rats that had been trained to discriminate injected nicotine from saline. Locomotor activity measurement following exposure to injected and aerosolized nicotine was also assessed as an additional behavioral outcome. We hypothesized that the stimulus effects of nicotine aerosol were central nervous system (CNS)-mediated and comparable to that produced by an injected nicotine training stimulus. We further hypothesized that number of aerosol puffs and the e-liquid nicotine concentration which was aerosolized would impact the substitution of nicotine aerosol for injected nicotine. Both nicotine injections and exposures to nicotine aerosol produced a dose-dependent effect on locomotor activity. Nicotine aerosol under our puffing conditions produced e-liquid nicotine concentration-dependent and puff-number-dependent complete substitution for the injected nicotine training condition. The nicotinic antagonist, mecamylamine, completely blocked nicotine-appropriate responding produce by the training dose of 0.3 mg/kg injected nicotine as well as that resulting from exposure to aerosol puffs generated by e-liquid containing 3 mg/ml nicotine, demonstrating that the stimulus of inhaled nicotine was most likely CNS-mediated and not due to olfactory stimulus properties. Overall, the results support the hypothesis that an aerosol exposure drug discrimination model in rodents has applicability to studying the abuse-related effects of e-cigarettes. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: Animal models of nicotine aerosol exposure using testing conditions resembling human e-cigarette use are lacking. In this study, we test a novel preclinical model of nicotine vaping in rodents which allows for the exploration of the abuse-related effects of e-cigarettes. This model has the potential to contribute both to our understanding of the abuse-related pharmacological effects of e-cigarettes as well as aid in the development of rationale, evidence-based e-cigarette regulatory policies.
电子烟使用的迅速增加凸显了开发相关的、可预测的动物模型以探索其潜在健康影响的重要性。本研究的目的是在模拟人类电子烟使用者行为的啮齿动物中,研究电子烟气溶胶的重复短暂暴露对滥用的影响。我们评估了在已被训练区分注射尼古丁和盐水的大鼠中,短暂重复吸入尼古丁气雾对滥用的刺激作用。还评估了暴露于注射和雾化尼古丁后运动活动的测量结果,作为额外的行为结果。我们假设,雾化尼古丁的刺激作用是中枢神经系统(CNS)介导的,与注射尼古丁训练刺激产生的作用相当。我们进一步假设,雾化的气溶胶烟弹数量和电子烟液尼古丁浓度会影响雾化尼古丁对注射尼古丁的替代程度。尼古丁注射和暴露于雾化尼古丁都会导致运动活动产生剂量依赖性效应。在我们的吸烟条件下,雾化尼古丁产生电子烟液尼古丁浓度依赖性和吸烟弹数依赖性,完全替代了 0.3mg/kg 注射尼古丁的训练条件。烟碱拮抗剂美加明完全阻断了 0.3mg/kg 注射尼古丁训练剂量和 3mg/ml 电子烟液产生的气溶胶烟弹暴露所产生的尼古丁适当反应,这表明吸入尼古丁的刺激作用很可能是中枢神经系统介导的,而不是由于嗅觉刺激特性。总体而言,这些结果支持这样一种假设,即在啮齿动物中进行雾化尼古丁暴露药物辨别模型研究具有研究电子烟与滥用相关的影响的适用性。
使用类似于人类使用电子烟的测试条件的尼古丁雾化暴露动物模型是缺乏的。在这项研究中,我们测试了一种新的尼古丁雾化在啮齿动物中的临床前模型,该模型允许探索电子烟与滥用相关的影响。该模型有可能有助于我们理解电子烟与滥用相关的药理学效应,并有助于制定合理的、基于证据的电子烟监管政策。