4.7 Article

PET imaging of dopamine transporters and D2/D3 receptors in female monkeys: effects of chronic cocaine self-administration

Journal

NEUROPSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY
Volume 48, Issue 10, Pages 1436-1445

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41386-023-01622-3

Keywords

-

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Brain imaging studies using PET have shown that long-term cocaine use is associated with lower levels of dopamine D2/D3 receptors and inconsistent effects on dopamine transporter availability. This study used PET imaging to examine the effects of cocaine self-administration on D2/D3 receptor availability and dopamine transporter availability in female monkeys. The results demonstrated sex differences in the relationship between D2/D3 receptor availability and vulnerability to long-term cocaine use, with baseline D2/D3 receptor availability only correlated with cocaine self-administration in the first week of exposure.
Brain imaging studies using positron emission tomography (PET) have shown that long-term cocaine use is associated with lower levels of dopamine (DA) D2/D3 receptors (D2/D3R); less consistent are the effects on DA transporter (DAT) availability. However, most studies have been conducted in male subjects (humans, monkeys, rodents). In this study, we used PET imaging in nine drug-naive female cynomolgus monkeys to determine if baseline measures of DAT, with [F-18]FECNT, and D2/D3R availability, with [C-11]raclopride, in the caudate nucleus, putamen and ventral striatum were associated with rates of cocaine self-administration and if these measures changed during long-term (similar to 13 months) cocaine self-administration and following time-off (3-9 months) from cocaine. Cocaine (0.2 mg/kg/injection) and 1.0 g food pellets were available under a multiple fixed-interval (FI) 3-min schedule of reinforcement. In contrast to what has been observed in male monkeys, baseline D2/D3R availability was positively correlated with rates of cocaine self-administration only during the first week of exposure; DAT availability did not correlate with cocaine self-administration. D2/D3R availability decreased similar to 20% following cumulative intakes of 100 and 1000 mg/kg cocaine; DAT availability did not significantly change. These reductions in D2/D3R availability did not recover over 9 months of time-off from cocaine. To determine if these reductions were reversible, three monkeys were implanted with osmotic pumps that delivered raclopride for 30 days. We found that chronic treatment with the D2/D3R antagonist raclopride increased D2/D3R availability in the ventral striatum but not in the other regions when compared to baseline levels. Over 13 months of self-administration, tolerance did not develop to the rate-decreasing effects of self-administered cocaine on food-reinforced responding, but number of injections and cocaine intake significantly increased over the 13 months. These data extend previous findings to female monkeys and suggest sex differences in the relationship between D2/D3R availability related to vulnerability and long-term cocaine use.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available