Wakabayashi Ken T, Baindur Ajay N, Feja Malte, Suarez Mauricio, Chen Karie, Bernosky-Smith Kimberly, Bass Caroline E
Neurocircuitry of Motivated Behavior Laboratory, Department of Psychology, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Lincoln, NE, United States.
Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, University at Buffalo, State University of New York, Buffalo, NY, United States.
Front Behav Neurosci. 2024 Mar 14;18:1363497. doi: 10.3389/fnbeh.2024.1363497. eCollection 2024.
Synthetic exendin-4 (EX4, exenatide), is a GLP-1 receptor agonist used clinically to treat glycemia in Type-2 diabetes mellitus. EX4 also promotes weight loss and alters food reward-seeking behaviors in part due to activation of GLP-1 receptors in the mesolimbic dopamine system. Evidence suggests that GLP-1 receptor activity can directly attenuate cue-induced reward seeking. Here, we tested the effects of EX4 (0.6, 1.2, and 2.4 μg/kg, i.p.) on incentive cue (IC) responding, using a task where rats emit a nosepoke response during an intermittent reward-predictive IC to obtain a sucrose reward. EX4 dose-dependently attenuated responding to ICs and increased the latencies to respond to the IC and enter the sucrose reward cup. Moreover, EX4 dose-dependently decreased the total number of active port nosepokes for every cue presented. There was no effect of EX4 on the number of reward cup entries per reward earned, a related reward-seeking metric with similar locomotor demand. There was a dose-dependent interaction between the EX4 dose and session time on the responding to ICs and nosepoke response latency. The interaction indicated that effects of EX4 at the beginning and end of the session differed by the dose of EX4, suggesting dose-dependent pharmacokinetic effects. EX4 had no effect on free sucrose consumption behavior (i.e., total volume consumed, bout size, number of bouts) within the range of total sucrose volumes obtainable during the IC task (3.5 ml). However, when rats were given unrestricted access for 1 h, where rats obtained much larger total volumes of sucrose (30 ml), we observed some dose-dependent EX4 effects on drinking behavior, including decreases in total volume consumed. Together, these findings suggest that activation of the GLP-1 receptor modulates the incentive properties of cues attributed with motivational significance.
合成艾塞那肽-4(EX4,艾塞那肽)是一种临床上用于治疗2型糖尿病血糖的胰高血糖素样肽-1(GLP-1)受体激动剂。EX4还能促进体重减轻,并改变食物奖赏寻求行为,部分原因是中脑边缘多巴胺系统中GLP-1受体的激活。有证据表明,GLP-1受体活性可直接减弱线索诱导的奖赏寻求行为。在此,我们使用一项任务来测试EX4(0.6、1.2和2.4μg/kg,腹腔注射)对动机线索(IC)反应的影响,在该任务中,大鼠在间歇性奖赏预测性IC期间发出鼻触反应以获得蔗糖奖赏。EX4剂量依赖性地减弱对IC的反应,并增加对IC做出反应和进入蔗糖奖赏杯的潜伏期。此外,EX4剂量依赖性地减少了针对每个呈现线索的主动端口鼻触总数。EX4对每次获得奖赏时进入奖赏杯的次数没有影响,这是一个具有相似运动需求的相关奖赏寻求指标。EX4剂量与实验时间之间在对IC的反应和鼻触反应潜伏期方面存在剂量依赖性相互作用。这种相互作用表明,EX4在实验开始和结束时的作用因EX4剂量而异,提示存在剂量依赖性药代动力学效应。在IC任务期间可获得的总蔗糖体积范围内(约3.5毫升),EX4对自由蔗糖消耗行为(即消耗的总体积、单次摄入量、摄入次数)没有影响。然而,当大鼠被给予1小时无限制摄入时,大鼠获得了大得多的蔗糖总体积(约30毫升),我们观察到EX4对饮水行为有一些剂量依赖性影响,包括消耗总体积的减少。总之,这些发现表明GLP-1受体的激活调节了具有动机意义的线索的激励特性。