Unknown

Dataset Information

0

Adolescent cocaine self-administration induces habit behavior in adulthood: sex differences and structural consequences.


ABSTRACT: Adolescent cocaine use increases the likelihood of drug abuse and addiction in adulthood, and etiological factors may include a cocaine-induced bias towards so-called 'reward-seeking' habits. To determine whether adolescent cocaine exposure indeed impacts decision-making strategies in adulthood, we trained adolescent mice to orally self-administer cocaine. In adulthood, males with a history of escalating self-administration developed a bias towards habit-based behaviors. In contrast, escalating females did not develop habit biases; rather, low response rates were associated with later behavioral inflexibility, independent of cocaine dose. We focused the rest of our report on understanding how individual differences in young-adolescent females predicted long-term behavioral outcomes. Low, 'stable' cocaine-reinforced response rates during adolescence were associated with cocaine-conditioned object preference and enlarged dendritic spine head size in the medial (prelimbic) prefrontal cortex in adulthood. Meanwhile, cocaine resilience was associated with enlarged spine heads in deep-layer orbitofrontal cortex. Re-exposure to the cocaine-associated context in adulthood energized responding in 'stable responders', which could then be reduced by the GABAB agonist baclofen and the putative tyrosine receptor kinase B (trkB) agonist, 7,8-dihydroxyflavone. Together, our findings highlight resilience to cocaine-induced habits in females relative to males when intake escalates. However, failures in instrumental conditioning in adolescent females may precipitate reward-seeking behaviors in adulthood, particularly in the context of cocaine exposure.

SUBMITTER: DePoy LM 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC5022090 | biostudies-other | 2016 Aug

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-other

altmetric image

Publications

Adolescent cocaine self-administration induces habit behavior in adulthood: sex differences and structural consequences.

DePoy L M LM   Allen A G AG   Gourley S L SL  

Translational psychiatry 20160830 8


Adolescent cocaine use increases the likelihood of drug abuse and addiction in adulthood, and etiological factors may include a cocaine-induced bias towards so-called 'reward-seeking' habits. To determine whether adolescent cocaine exposure indeed impacts decision-making strategies in adulthood, we trained adolescent mice to orally self-administer cocaine. In adulthood, males with a history of escalating self-administration developed a bias towards habit-based behaviors. In contrast, escalating  ...[more]

Similar Datasets

| S-EPMC3159046 | biostudies-other
| S-EPMC8285523 | biostudies-literature
2021-09-09 | PXD022832 | Pride
| S-EPMC6534474 | biostudies-literature
2023-05-20 | GSE231074 | GEO
| S-EPMC3698560 | biostudies-literature
| S-EPMC5568877 | biostudies-other
| S-EPMC6965638 | biostudies-literature
| S-EPMC3924529 | biostudies-literature
| S-SCDT-10_15252-EMBR_202356981 | biostudies-other