PMID: 11923456Mar 30, 2002Paper

Cocaine administered into the medial prefrontal cortex reinstates cocaine-seeking behavior by increasing AMPA receptor-mediated glutamate transmission in the nucleus accumbens

The Journal of Neuroscience : the Official Journal of the Society for Neuroscience
W-K ParkR C Pierce

Abstract

One of the major determinants of reinstatement to cocaine use among human addicts is acute reexposure to the drug, which often precipitates cocaine craving and relapse. We used an animal model of cocaine relapse to determine the role of the glutamatergic pathway from the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) to the nucleus accumbens in the reinstatement of cocaine-seeking behavior after a cocaine priming injection. Rats were trained to self-administer cocaine intravenously on a second order schedule. Responding was extinguished subsequently by substituting saline for cocaine. During subsequent reinstatement sessions, drug-seeking behavior was assessed after noncontingent priming injections. Results indicated that reinstatement induced by a systemic cocaine injection was blocked by intra-mPFC administration of the dopamine antagonist flupenthixol. Consistent with this finding, administration of cocaine directly into the mPFC reinstated cocaine-seeking behavior. Administration of cocaine into the nucleus accumbens also reinstated drug seeking, whereas microinjection of cocaine into the neostriatum or lateral septum did not. Reinstatement of cocaine seeking induced by intra-mPFC cocaine was blocked by administration of the AMPA receptor...Continue Reading

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