4.4 Article

Ghrelin receptor antagonism attenuates cocaine- and amphetamine-induced locomotor stimulation, accumbal dopamine release, and conditioned place preference

Journal

PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY
Volume 211, Issue 4, Pages 415-422

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00213-010-1907-7

Keywords

Psychostimulant drugs; Ghrelin; Reinforcement; Accumbens; VTA

Funding

  1. Swedish Research Council [K2006-21X-04247-33-3, K2007-54X-20328-013]
  2. Alcohol Research Council of the Swedish Alcohol Retailing Monopoly
  3. The Swedish Labour Market Insurance
  4. The Swedish Brain Foundation
  5. Swedish Council for Tobacco Research
  6. foundations of Wilhelm and Martina Lundgren, Knut and Alice Wallenberg
  7. The Adlerbert Research, Thuring's, Langmanska art, Torsten and Ragnar Soderberg, Magnus Bergvall foundation
  8. European Union [FP7-HEALTH-2009-241592, FP7-KBBE-2009-245009]
  9. Novo Nordisk (GeA/AIR)
  10. ALF Goteborg [SU7601, SU76540]
  11. Swedish Foundation for Strategic Research to Sahlgrenska Center for Cardiovascular and Metabolic Research [A305-188]
  12. The Swedish Society of Medicine

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Recently we demonstrated that genetic or pharmacological suppression of the central ghrelin signaling system, involving the growth hormone secretagogue receptor 1A (GHS-R1A), lead to a reduced reward profile from alcohol. As the target circuits for ghrelin in the brain include a mesolimbic reward pathway that is intimately associated with reward-seeking behaviour, we sought to determine whether the central ghrelin signaling system is required for reward from drugs of abuse other than alcohol, namely cocaine or amphetamine. We found that amphetamine-as well as cocaine-induced locomotor stimulation and accumbal dopamine release were reduced in mice treated with a GHS-R1A antagonist. Moreover, the ability of these drugs to condition a place preference was also attenuated by the GHS-R1A antagonist. Thus GHS-R1A appears to be required not only for alcohol-induced reward, but also for reward induced by psychostimulant drugs. Our data suggest that the central ghrelin signaling system constitutes a novel potential target for treatment of addictive behaviours such as drug dependence.

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