A large-scale c-Fos brain mapping study on extinction of cocaine-primed reinstatement.
Magalie LenoirMichel EngelnSylvia NavaillesPaul GirardeauSerge H AhmedPublished in: Neuropsychopharmacology : official publication of the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology (2024)
Individuals with cocaine addiction can experience many craving episodes and subsequent relapses, which represents the main obstacle to recovery. Craving is often favored when abstinent individuals ingest a small dose of cocaine, encounter cues associated with drug use or are exposed to stressors. Using a cocaine-primed reinstatement model in rat, we recently showed that cocaine-conditioned interoceptive cues can be extinguished with repeated cocaine priming in the absence of drug reinforcement, a phenomenon we called extinction of cocaine priming. Here, we applied a large-scale c-Fos brain mapping approach following extinction of cocaine priming in male rats to identify brain regions implicated in processing the conditioned interoceptive stimuli of cocaine priming. We found that cocaine-primed reinstatement is associated with increased c-Fos expression in key brain regions (e.g., dorsal and ventral striatum, several prefrontal areas and insular cortex), while its extinction mostly disengages them. Moreover, while reinstatement behavior was correlated with insular and accumbal activation, extinction of cocaine priming implicated parts of the ventral pallidum, the mediodorsal thalamus and the median raphe. These brain patterns of activation and inhibition suggest that after repeated priming, interoceptive signals lose their conditioned discriminative properties and that action-outcome associations systems are mobilized in search for new contingencies, a brain state that may predispose to rapid relapse.
Keyphrases
- prefrontal cortex
- resting state
- white matter
- functional connectivity
- spinal cord
- cerebral ischemia
- poor prognosis
- oxidative stress
- deep brain stimulation
- peripheral blood
- spinal cord injury
- mass spectrometry
- working memory
- blood brain barrier
- neuropathic pain
- transcranial magnetic stimulation
- electronic health record
- high frequency