4.4 Article

Cannabinoid receptor-1 signaling contributions to sign-tracking and conditioned reinforcement in rats

Journal

PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY
Volume 235, Issue 10, Pages 3031-3043

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00213-018-4993-6

Keywords

Sign-tracking; Endocannabinoids; CB1 receptor; Pavlovian; Conditioned reinforcement; Appetitive; Approach; Cue-motivated; Incentive

Funding

  1. McKnight Memory and Cognitive Disorders Award
  2. NARSAD Young Investigator Grant [24950]
  3. NIDA [R01DA043533, R01DA042595, R01DA022340]
  4. Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology at the University of Maryland, School of Medicine

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Rationale Endocannabinoids (eCBs) are critical gatekeepers of dopaminergic signaling, and disrupting cannabinoid receptor-1 (CB1) signaling alters DA dynamics to attenuate cue-motivated behaviors. Prior studies suggest that dopamine (DA) release plays a critical role in driving sign-tracking. Objectives Here, we determine whether systemic injections of rimonabant, a CB1 receptor inverse agonist, during Pavlovian lever autoshaping impair the expression of sign-tracking. We next examine whether rimonabant blocks the reinforcing properties of the Pavlovian lever cue in a conditioned reinforcement test. Methods In Exp. 1, we trained rats in Pavlovian lever autoshaping prior to systemic rimonabant injections (0, 1, 3 mg/kg) during early and late Pavlovian lever autoshaping sessions. In Exp. 2, we trained rats in Pavlovian lever autoshaping prior to systemic rimonabant injections (0, 1 mg/kg) during a conditioned reinforcement test. Results Rimonabant dose-dependently decreased lever contact and probability, and increased sign-tracker's latency to approach the lever cue early in Pavlovian training. With extended training, many previously goal-tracking and intermediate rats shifted to lever approach, which remained dose-dependently sensitive to rimonabant. Rimonabant attenuated cue-evoked food cup approach early, but not late, in conditioning, and did not affect pellet retrieval or consumption. The inserted lever cue served as a robust conditioned reinforcer after Pavlovian lever autoshaping, and 1 mg/kg rimonabant blocked conditioned reinforcement. Conclusions Together, our results suggest that CB1 signaling mediates two critical properties of incentive stimuli; their ability to attract (Exp. 1) and their ability to reinforce (Exp. 2) behavior.

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