Xie Qiaowei, Dasari Rohan, Namba Mark D, Buck Lauren A, Side Christine M, Park Kyewon, Jackson Joshua G, Barker Jacqueline M
Department of Pharmacology and Physiology, Drexel University College of Medicine, USA; Graduate Program in Pharmacology and Physiology, Drexel University College of Medicine, USA.
Department of Pharmacology and Physiology, Drexel University College of Medicine, USA.
Neuropharmacology. 2025 Mar 1;265:110245. doi: 10.1016/j.neuropharm.2024.110245. Epub 2024 Dec 2.
Cocaine use disorder (CUD) is highly comorbid with HIV infection and worsens HIV outcomes. Preclinical research on the outcomes of HIV infection may yield crucial information on neurobehavioral changes resulting from chronic drug exposure in people living with HIV (PLWH). Repeated exposure to cocaine alters behavioral responses to cocaine. This includes development of cocaine locomotor sensitization - or increased locomotor responses to the same doses of cocaine - which depends on nucleus accumbens (NAc) neural plasticity. NAc astrocytes are key regulators of neural activity and plasticity, and their function can be impaired by cocaine exposure and HIV infection, thus implicating them as potential regulators of HIV-induced changes in behavioral response to cocaine. To characterize the effects of HIV infection on cocaine locomotor sensitization, we employed the EcoHIV mouse model in male and female mice to assess changes in locomotor responses after repeated cocaine (10 mg/kg) exposure and challenge. EcoHIV infection potentiated expression of cocaine sensitization. We also identified EcoHIV-induced increases in expression of the astrocytic nuclear marker Sox9 selectively in the NAc core. To investigate whether modulation of NAc astrocytes could reverse EcoHIV-induced deficits, we employed a chemogenetic approach. We found that chemogenetic activation of NAc astrocyte Gq signaling attenuated EcoHIV-enhanced cocaine sensitization. We propose that HIV infection contributes to cocaine behavioral sensitization and induces adaptations in NAc astrocytes, while promoting NAc astrocytic Gq-signaling can recover EcoHIV-induced behavioral changes. These findings identify potential cellular substrates of disordered cocaine-driven behavior in the context of HIV infection and point toward strategies to reduce cocaine-related behavior in PLWH.
可卡因使用障碍(CUD)与HIV感染高度共病,并会恶化HIV感染的预后。关于HIV感染结局的临床前研究可能会产生关于HIV感染者(PLWH)因长期药物暴露导致的神经行为变化的关键信息。反复接触可卡因会改变对可卡因的行为反应。这包括可卡因运动致敏的发展——即对相同剂量可卡因的运动反应增加——这取决于伏隔核(NAc)的神经可塑性。NAc星形胶质细胞是神经活动和可塑性的关键调节因子,它们的功能会因可卡因暴露和HIV感染而受损,因此表明它们可能是HIV诱导的对可卡因行为反应变化的潜在调节因子。为了表征HIV感染对可卡因运动致敏的影响,我们在雄性和雌性小鼠中使用了EcoHIV小鼠模型,以评估反复给予可卡因(10mg/kg)暴露和激发后运动反应的变化。EcoHIV感染增强了可卡因致敏的表达。我们还发现EcoHIV诱导NAc核心中星形胶质细胞核标记物Sox9的表达选择性增加。为了研究对NAc星形胶质细胞的调节是否可以逆转EcoHIV诱导的缺陷,我们采用了化学遗传学方法。我们发现对NAc星形胶质细胞Gq信号的化学遗传学激活减弱了EcoHIV增强的可卡因致敏作用。我们提出,HIV感染促成了可卡因行为致敏,并诱导了NAc星形胶质细胞的适应性变化,而促进NAc星形胶质细胞Gq信号传导可以恢复EcoHIV诱导的行为变化。这些发现确定了在HIV感染背景下可卡因驱动行为紊乱的潜在细胞底物,并指出了减少PLWH中与可卡因相关行为的策略。