4.2 Article

Chronic nicotine pretreatment is sufficient to upregulate α4*nicotinic receptors and increase oral nicotine self-administration in mice

Journal

BMC NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 15, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/1471-2202-15-89

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Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  2. NARSAD
  3. Victoria Foundation-Myre and Winifred Sim Fund
  4. Canadian Foundation for Innovation grant
  5. British Columbia Knowledge Development Fund
  6. University of Victoria Graduate Fellowship
  7. Dr. Julius F. Schleicher Graduate Scholarship

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Background: Understanding the underlying causes of nicotine addiction will require a multidisciplinary approach examining the key molecular, cellular and neuronal circuit functional changes that drive escalating levels of nicotine self-administration. In this study, we examined whether mice pretreated with chronic nicotine, at a dosing regimen that results in maximal nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) upregulation, would display evidence of nicotine-dependent behaviour during nicotine self-administration. Results: We investigated oral self-administration of nicotine using a two-bottle choice paradigm in which one bottle contained the vehicle (saccharine-sweetened water), while the other contained nicotine (200 g/ml) in vehicle. Knock-in mice with YFP-tagged alpha 4 nAChR subunits (alpha 4YFP) were implanted with osmotic pumps delivering either nicotine (2 mg/kg/hr) or saline for 10 days. After 10 days of pretreatment, mice were exposed to the nicotine self-administration paradigm, consisting of four days of choice followed by three days of nicotine abstinence repeated for five weeks. Mice pre-exposed to nicotine had upregulated alpha 4YFP nAChR subunits in the hippocampal medial perforant path and on ventral tegmental area GABAergic neurons as compared to chronic saline mice. Compared to control saline-pretreated mice, in a two bottle-choice experiment, nicotine-primed mice ingested a significantly larger daily dose of nicotine and also exhibited post-abstinence binge drinking of nicotine. Conclusions: Chronic forced pre-exposure of nicotine is sufficient to induce elevated oral nicotine intake and supports the postulate that nAChR upregulation may be a key factor influencing nicotine self-administration.

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