4.1 Article

Operant model of frustrated expected reward in mice

Journal

ADDICTION BIOLOGY
Volume 17, Issue 4, Pages 770-782

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/j.1369-1600.2011.00423.x

Keywords

Aggressiveness; cocaine; food; frustration; operant behaviour; progressive ratio

Funding

  1. DG Research of the European Commission (PHECOMP) [LHSM-CT-2007-037669]
  2. DG Research of the European Commission (GENADDICT) [LSHM-CT-2004-05166]
  3. Spanish 'Instituto de Salud Carlos III' (RTA) [RD06/001/001]
  4. Spanish 'Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion' [SAF2007-64062]
  5. Spanish 'Ministerio de Sanidad, Politica Social e Igualdad' [2009/026]
  6. Catalan Government [SGR2009-00131]
  7. ICREA Foundation (ICREA Academia)
  8. Spanish 'Instituto de Salud Carlos III'
  9. FEDER

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One aspect of the addictive process that has not been thoroughly investigated is the consequence of the frustrated state occurring when the drug is not available. The present study aimed to validate a novel operant model of frustrated expected reward in mice. C57BL/6J mice were trained in operant conditioning maintained by chocolate-flavoured pellets or cocaine. After the completion of high rates of responding on a progressive ratio schedule, the reward was unexpectedly withheld. The consequences of this frustrated behaviour on anxiety, aggressiveness, perseveration, extinction and reinstatement were investigated. Mice exposed to the frustrated event perseverated in the operant responses and showed increased aggressiveness in the residentintruder test. These animals also showed higher rates of cue-induced reinstatement of drug seeking. The present study provides a reliable operant model in mice to evaluate a frustrated state following reward unavailability. This animal model could be useful to study the behavioural and neurochemical consequences related to the emotional states generated during the omission of a highly expected reward.

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