4.6 Article

The interaction between sexual reward/ deprivation and the acquisition, extinction and reinstatement of morphine-seeking behavior

Journal

BEHAVIOURAL BRAIN RESEARCH
Volume 416, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbr.2021.113579

Keywords

Morphine; Sexual behavior; Natural reward; Sexual deprivation; Conditioned place; preference

Funding

  1. Iran University of Medical Sciences [95-02-185-28659]

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Natural rewards and abused drugs affect brain reward systems, with sexual experience prolonging morphine-seeking behavior while sex deprivation blocking maintenance. Interaction between sex and drug rewards influences preference for morphine, indicating the impact of natural rewarding stimuli on drug-seeking behaviors.
Natural rewards and abused drugs affect the function of the common brain's reward system. Interaction between social and drug rewards can change the vulnerability to development of drug addiction. Here, we investigate the effects of sexual experience and sex deprivation on the acquisition, maintenance, and drug prime-induced reinstatement of morphine-seeking behavior in male mice using conditioned place preference (CPP). CPP induced with morphine (3, 5, 7 mg/kg, s.c. for 3 days) lasted for 10 days after cessation of morphine treatment and priming dose of morphine (2 mg/kg, s.c.) reinstated the extinguished CPP. In the post-test phase, sexually experienced animals showed a lower preference for morphine compared to sex-deprived males. In the extinction phase, sex deprivation shortened maintenance time compared to control animals. The preference for morphine in sexually experienced animals did not diminish by the seventeenth extinction day. In both groups, the priming injection of morphine after the extinction period could reinstate the extinguished morphine-induced CPP. Together, these data showed the interaction between sex and drug reward and that sexual behavior -a natural rewarding stimulus- can prolong, whereas sex deprivation can block the maintenance of morphine-seeking behaviors. Sexual experience may induce functional and morphological alterations in brain reward areas particularly the mesolimbic system similar to repeated exposure to abused drugs which can affect morphine-seeking behaviors.

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