Anxiety conditioned to nicotine in the elevated plus-maze is time dependent |
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Authors: | Tucci S Cheeta S Genn R F Seth P File S E |
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Affiliation: | Psychopharmacology Research Unit, Centre for Neuroscience, GKT School of Biomedical Sciences, King's College London, Hodgkin Building, Guy's Campus, London SE1 1UL, UK. sonia.tucci@kcl.ac.uk |
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Abstract: | Conditioning to the anxiogenic effects of nicotine has previously been demonstrated in the social interaction test and there was no generalization of conditioning between the social interaction and elevated plus-maze tests. Because the two tests generate distinct states of anxiety, the conditioning could have occurred to the cues associated with the test environment and/or to those associated with the type of anxiety generated by the test. The elevated plus-maze permits separation of these two factors, because quite distinct states of anxiety are generated on trials 1 and 2, whereas the apparatus cues remain the same. Rats that had been tested on day 1 in the plus-maze, 5 min after nicotine (0.45 mg/kg), showed a conditioned anxiogenic response when tested undrugged on day 2. This was shown by significantly lower percentages of open-arm entries and percentage of time spent on the open arms, compared with control groups. Thus, conditioning to apparatus cues is sufficient to mediate a conditioned anxiogenic effect. The importance of the timing of the nicotine-associated cues was demonstrated by the failure to obtain conditioned anxiogenic effects when rats were exposed to the plus-maze on day 1, 30 min after nicotine (0.45 or 0.1 mg/kg). |
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