Cabeza de Vaca S, Carr K D
Millhauser Laboratories, Department of Psychiatry, New York University Medical Center, New York, New York 10016, USA.
J Neurosci. 1998 Sep 15;18(18):7502-10. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.18-18-07502.1998.
Chronic food restriction increases the systemic self-administration and locomotor-stimulating effect of abused drugs. However, it is not clear whether these behavioral changes reflect enhanced rewarding potency or a CNS-based modulatory process. The purpose of this study was to determine whether food restriction specifically increases the rewarding potency of drugs, as indexed by their threshold-lowering effect on lateral hypothalamic self-stimulation, and whether any such effect can be attributed to an enhanced central response rather than changes in drug disposition. When drugs were administered systemically, food restriction potentiated the threshold-lowering effect of amphetamine (0.125, 0.25, and 0.5 mg/kg, i.p.), phencyclidine (1.0, 2.0, and 3.0 mg/kg, i.p.), and dizocilpine (MK-801) (0.0125, 0.05, and 0.1 mg/kg, i.p.) but not nicotine (0.15, 0.3, 0.45 mg/kg, s.c.). When amphetamine (25.0, 50.0, and 100.0 microgram) and MK-801 (5.0, 10.0, and 20.0 microgram) were administered via the intracerebroventricular route, food restriction again potentiated the threshold-lowering effects and increased the locomotor-stimulating effects of both drugs. These results indicate that food restriction increases the sensitivity of neural substrates for rewarding and stimulant effects of drugs. In light of work that attributes rewarding effects of MK-801 to blockade of NMDA receptors on medium spiny neurons in nucleus accumbens, the elements affected by food restriction may lie downstream from the mesoaccumbens dopamine neurons whose terminals are the site of amphetamine-rewarding action. Possible metabolic-endocrine triggers of this effect are discussed, as is the likelihood that mechanisms mediating the modulatory effect of food restriction differ from those mediating sensitization by intermittent drug exposure.
长期食物限制会增强滥用药物的全身性自我给药及运动刺激效应。然而,尚不清楚这些行为变化是反映了奖赏效力增强还是基于中枢神经系统的调节过程。本研究的目的是确定食物限制是否特异性地增强了药物的奖赏效力(以其对下丘脑外侧自我刺激的阈值降低效应为指标),以及这种效应是否可归因于中枢反应增强而非药物处置的变化。当药物经全身给药时,食物限制增强了苯丙胺(0.125、0.25和0.5mg/kg,腹腔注射)、苯环利定(1.0、2.0和3.0mg/kg,腹腔注射)和地佐环平(MK-801)(0.0125、0.05和0.1mg/kg,腹腔注射)的阈值降低效应,但对尼古丁(0.15、0.3、0.45mg/kg,皮下注射)无此作用。当苯丙胺(25.0、50.0和100.0微克)和MK-801(5.0、10.0和20.0微克)经脑室内途径给药时,食物限制再次增强了两种药物的阈值降低效应并增加了运动刺激效应。这些结果表明,食物限制增加了对药物奖赏和刺激效应的神经底物的敏感性。鉴于有研究将MK-801的奖赏效应归因于对伏隔核中中等棘状神经元上NMDA受体的阻断,受食物限制影响的因素可能位于中脑伏隔核多巴胺神经元的下游,这些神经元的终末是苯丙胺奖赏作用的位点。讨论了这种效应可能的代谢-内分泌触发因素,以及介导食物限制调节效应的机制与介导间歇性药物暴露所致敏化的机制不同的可能性。