Transcriptional correlates of cocaine-associated learning in striatal ARC ensembles.
Marine SaleryArthur GodinoYu Qing XuJohn F FullardRomain Durand-de CuttoliAlexa R LaBancaLeanne M HoltScott J RussoPanos RoussosEric J NestlerPublished in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2023)
Learned associations between the rewarding effects of drugs and the context in which they are experienced underlie context-induced relapse. Previous work demonstrates the importance of sparse neuronal populations - called neuronal ensembles - in associative learning and cocaine seeking, but it remains unknown whether the encoding vs. retrieval of cocaine-associated memories involves similar or distinct mechanisms of ensemble activation and reactivation in nucleus accumbens (NAc). We use ArcCreER T2 mice to establish that mostly distinct NAc ensembles are recruited by initial vs. repeated exposures to cocaine, which are then differentially reactivated and exert distinct effects during cocaine-related memory retrieval. Single-nuclei RNA-sequencing of these ensembles demonstrates predominant recruitment of D1 medium spiny neurons and identifies transcriptional properties that are selective to cocaine-recruited NAc neurons and could explain distinct excitability features. These findings fundamentally advance our understanding of how cocaine drives pathological memory formation during repeated exposures.