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Rats classified as low or high cocaine locomotor responders: A unique model involving striatal dopamine transporters that predicts cocaine addiction-like behaviors
Authors:Dorothy J. Yamamoto  Anna M. Nelson  Bruce H. Mandt  Gaynor A. Larson  Jacki M. Rorabaugh  Christopher M.C. Ng  Kelsey M. Barcomb  Toni L. Richards  Richard M. Allen  Nancy R. Zahniser
Affiliation:1. Department of Pharmacology, School of Medicine, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora, CO 80045, United States;2. Neuroscience Program, School of Medicine, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora, CO 80045, United States;3. Department of Psychology, University of Colorado Denver, Denver, CO 80217, United States
Abstract:Individual differences are a hallmark of drug addiction. Here, we describe a rat model based on differential initial responsiveness to low dose cocaine. Despite similar brain cocaine levels, individual outbred Sprague-Dawley rats exhibit markedly different magnitudes of acute cocaine-induced locomotor activity and, thereby, can be classified as low or high cocaine responders (LCRs or HCRs). LCRs and HCRs differ in drug-induced, but not novelty-associated, hyperactivity. LCRs have higher basal numbers of striatal dopamine transporters (DATs) than HCRs and exhibit marginal cocaine inhibition of in vivo DAT activity and cocaine-induced increases in extracellular DA. Importantly, lower initial cocaine response predicts greater locomotor sensitization, conditioned place preference and greater motivation to self-administer cocaine following low dose acquisition. Further, outbred Long-Evans rats classified as LCRs, versus HCRs, are more sensitive to cocaine's discriminative stimulus effects. Overall, results to date with the LCR/HCR model underscore the contribution of striatal DATs to individual differences in initial cocaine responsiveness and the value of assessing the influence of initial drug response on subsequent expression of addiction-like behaviors.
Keywords:Individual differences to cocaine   Locomotor activity   Dopamine transporter   Dopamine uptake   Dopamine clearance   NMDAR phosphorylation   Cocaine sensitization   Cocaine conditioned place preference   Cocaine self-administration   Drug discrimination
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