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Chronic cocaine produces decreases in N/OFQ peptide levels in select rat brain regions
Authors:Patrizia Romualdi  Manuela Di Benedetto  Claudio D'Addario  Stephanie L. Collins  Dean Wade  Sanzio Candeletti  Sari Izenwasser
Affiliation:Department of Pharmacology, University of Bologna, 40126 Bologna, Italy. patrizia.romualdi@unibo.it
Abstract:The interaction of opioids and stimulants is well established; however, the mechanisms that underlie the role that opioid receptors play in psychostimulant action are not. Nociceptin/orphaninFQ (N/OFQ), the endogenous agonist at NOP receptors, attenuates the behavioral effects of cocaine. The effects of cocaine on N/OFQ were examined in rats using immunoautoradiographic and RIA techniques. Chronic administration of cocaine decreased N/OFQ in medial regions of the caudate putamen, the nucleus accumbens shell, and the substantia nigra. These studies show that N/OFQ levels are altered by treatment with cocaine. Furthermore, the changes in N/OFQ parallel those seen for kappa-opioid receptors, suggesting that the interactions between cocaine and these systems might be similar.
Keywords:  KeywordHeading"  >Index Entries Cocaine  N/OFQ  opioid  caudate putamen  nucleus accumbens  substantia nigra
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