Reduced cue-induced reinstatement of cocaine-seeking behavior in Plcb1 +/- mice.
Judit Cabana-DomínguezElena Martín-GarcíaAna Gallego-RomanRafael MaldonadoNoèlia Fernàndez-CastilloBru CormandPublished in: Translational psychiatry (2021)
Cocaine addiction causes serious health problems, and no effective treatment is available yet. We previously identified a genetic risk variant for cocaine addiction in the PLCB1 gene and found this gene upregulated in postmortem brains of cocaine abusers and in human dopaminergic neuron-like cells after an acute cocaine exposure. Here, we functionally tested the contribution of the PLCB1 gene to cocaine addictive properties using Plcb1+/- mice. First, we performed a general phenotypic characterization and found that Plcb1+/- mice showed normal behavior, although they had increased anxiety and impaired short-term memory. Subsequently, mice were trained for operant conditioning, self-administered cocaine for 10 days, and were tested for cocaine motivation. After extinction, we found a reduction in the cue-induced reinstatement of cocaine-seeking behavior in Plcb1+/- mice. After reinstatement, we identified transcriptomic alterations in the medial prefrontal cortex of Plcb1+/- mice, mostly related to pathways relevant to addiction like the dopaminergic synapse and long-term potentiation. To conclude, we found that heterozygous deletion of the Plcb1 gene decreases cue-induced reinstatement of cocaine-seeking, pointing at PLCB1 as a possible therapeutic target for preventing relapse and treating cocaine addiction.
Keyphrases
- prefrontal cortex
- high fat diet induced
- mental health
- copy number
- genome wide
- drug induced
- public health
- healthcare
- endothelial cells
- wild type
- risk assessment
- climate change
- metabolic syndrome
- dna methylation
- depressive symptoms
- working memory
- early onset
- adipose tissue
- genome wide identification
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- physical activity
- resistance training
- stress induced
- free survival