K v 7 Channel Opener Retigabine Reduces Self-Administration of Cocaine but Not Sucrose in Rats.
Esteban S UrenaCody C DiezelMauricio SernaGrace Hala'ufiaLisa MajutaKara R BarberTodd W VanderahArthur C RiegelPublished in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2023)
The increasing rates of drug misuse highlight the urgency of identifying improved therapeutics for treatment. Most drug-seeking behaviors that can be modeled in rodents utilize the repeated intravenous self-administration (SA) of drugs. Recent studies examining the mesolimbic pathway suggest that K v 7/KCNQ channels may contribute in the transition from recreational to chronic drug use. However, to date, all such studies used noncontingent, experimenter-delivered drug model systems, and the extent to which this effect generalizes to rats trained to self-administer drug is not known. Here, we tested the ability of retigabine (ezogabine), a K v 7 channel opener, to regulate instrumental behavior in male Sprague Dawley rats. We first validated the ability of retigabine to target experimenter-delivered cocaine in a CPP assay and found that retigabine reduced the acquisition of place preference. Next, we trained rats for cocaine-SA under a fixed-ratio or progressive-ratio reinforcement schedule and found that retigabine-pretreatment attenuated the self-administration of low to moderate doses of cocaine. This was not observed in parallel experiments, with rats self-administering sucrose, a natural reward. Compared to sucrose-SA, cocaine-SA was associated with reductions in the expression of the K v 7.5 subunit in the nucleus accumbens, without alterations in K v 7.2 and K v 7.3. Therefore, these studies reveal a reward specific reduction in SA behavior considered relevant for the study of long-term compulsive-like behavior and supports the notion that K v 7 is a potential therapeutic target for human psychiatric diseases with dysfunctional reward circuitry.
Keyphrases
- prefrontal cortex
- drug induced
- case control
- mental health
- adverse drug
- emergency department
- multiple sclerosis
- chronic pain
- endothelial cells
- dna methylation
- obsessive compulsive disorder
- genome wide
- small molecule
- high throughput
- low dose
- binding protein
- risk assessment
- human health
- protein kinase
- combination therapy