4.2 Article

Propensity for social interaction predicts nicotine-reinforced behaviors in outbred rats

Journal

GENES BRAIN AND BEHAVIOR
Volume 13, Issue 2, Pages 202-212

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gbb.12112

Keywords

Nicotine; outbred; rats; self-administration; social learning

Funding

  1. NIDA [DA-026894, DA021336]
  2. Chicago Biomedical Consortium
  3. Searle Funds at the Chicago Community Trust
  4. Conte Center for Computational Neuropsychiatric Genomics [NIH P50MH94267]
  5. [DK-088975]

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Social and genetic factors can influence smoking behavior. Using olfactogustatory stimuli as the sensory cue for intravenous nicotine self-administration (SA), we previously showed that social learning of nicotine contingent odor cue prevented rats from developing conditioned taste aversion and allowed them to instead establish stable nicotine SA. We hypothesized that genetic factors influenced socially acquired nicotine SA. A heterogeneous stock (HS; N/NIH) of outbred rats was trained to self-administer nicotine using the social learning protocol. Both male and female HS rats acquired nicotine SA, but females self-administered more nicotine than males. After extinction, the context previously paired with nicotine SA, in conjunction with socially transmitted drug cues, was sufficient to cause reinstatement of drug-seeking behavior. Wide variation in both nicotine intake and reinstatement was observed. Using multiple regression analysis, we found that measures of social interaction were significant predictors of nicotine intake and reinstatement of drug seeking in both males and females. Furthermore, measures of depression were predictors of nicotine intake in both males and females, anxiety was a predictor only in males and response to novelty was a predictor only in females. In males, measures of both depression and anxiety predicted nicotine reinstatement. Together, these data supported the ideas that genetically determined propensities for emotional and social phenotypes are significant determinants for nicotine-reinforced behavior, and that the HS rat is a suitable tool for dissecting genetic mechanisms that may underlie the interaction between social behavior, anxiety, depression and smoking.

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