4.5 Article

Alterations of Amphetamine Reward by Prior Nicotine and Alcohol Treatment: The Role of Age and Dopamine

Journal

BRAIN SCIENCES
Volume 11, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/brainsci11040420

Keywords

amphetamine reward; nicotine; alcohol; conditioned place preference; dopamine transporter; age

Categories

Funding

  1. Tobacco-Related Disease Research Program [24RT0023]

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Evidence suggests that nicotine and alcohol can each serve as a gateway drug, and prior treatment with nicotine and alcohol may alter the reward effects of amphetamine differently in adult and adolescent mice. Differences were observed in the response to amphetamine between adult and adolescent mice, potentially related to changes in dopaminergic neurotransmission.
Evidence suggests that nicotine and alcohol can each serve as a gateway drug. We determined whether prior nicotine and alcohol treatment would alter amphetamine reward. Also, we examined whether age and dopaminergic neurotransmission are important in this regard. Male and female adolescent and adult C57BL/6J mice were tested for baseline place preference. Mice then received six conditioning with saline/nicotine (0.25 mg/kg) twice daily, followed by six conditioning with saline/ethanol (2 g/kg). Control mice were conditioned with saline/saline throughout. Finally, mice were conditioned with amphetamine (3 mg/kg), once in the nicotine-alcohol-paired chamber, and tested for place preference 24 h later. The following day, mice were challenged with amphetamine (1 mg/kg) and tested for place preference under a drugged state. Mice were then immediately euthanized, their brain removed, and nucleus accumbens isolated and processed for the level of dopamine receptors and transporter and glutamate receptors. We observed a greater amphetamine-induced place preference in naive adolescents than adult mice with no change in state-dependent place preference between the two age groups. In contrast, amphetamine induced a significant place preference in adult but not adolescent mice with prior nicotine-alcohol exposure under the drug-free state. The preference was significantly greater in adults than adolescents under the drugged state. The enhanced response was associated with higher dopamine-transporter and D-1 but reduced D-2 receptors' expression in adult rather than adolescent mice, with no changes in glutamate receptors levels. These results suggest that prior nicotine and alcohol treatment differentially alters amphetamine reward in adult and adolescent mice. Alterations in dopaminergic neurotransmission may be involved in this phenotype.

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