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Self-administration acquisition latency predicts locomotor sensitivity to cocaine in male rats.
Rakela, Samantha; Sortman, Bo W; Gobin, Christina; Hao, Sophie; Caceres-Brun, Delfina; Warren, Brandon L.
Affiliation
  • Rakela S; Department of Pharmacodynamics, University of Florida, 1345 Center Dr., Gainesville, FL 32610, United States.
  • Sortman BW; Department of Pharmacodynamics, University of Florida, 1345 Center Dr., Gainesville, FL 32610, United States.
  • Gobin C; Department of Pharmacodynamics, University of Florida, 1345 Center Dr., Gainesville, FL 32610, United States.
  • Hao S; Department of Pharmacodynamics, University of Florida, 1345 Center Dr., Gainesville, FL 32610, United States.
  • Caceres-Brun D; Department of Pharmacodynamics, University of Florida, 1345 Center Dr., Gainesville, FL 32610, United States. Electronic address: brandon.warren@ufl.edu.
  • Warren BL; Department of Pharmacodynamics, University of Florida, 1345 Center Dr., Gainesville, FL 32610, United States.
Behav Brain Res ; 473: 115170, 2024 Jul 29.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39084564
ABSTRACT
Individual differences in drug use emerge soon after initial exposure, and only a fraction of individuals who initiate drug use go on to develop a substance use disorder. Variability in vulnerability to establishing drug self-administration behavior is also evident in preclinical rodent models. Latent characteristics that underlie this variability and the relationship between early drug use patterns and later use remain unclear. Here, we attempt to determine whether propensity to establish cocaine self-administration is related to subsequent cocaine self-administration behavior in male Sprague-Dawley rats (n = 14). Prior to initiating training, we evaluated basal locomotor and anxiety-like behavior in a novel open field test. We then trained rats to self-administer cocaine in daily 3 h cocaine (0.75 mg/kg/infusion) self-administration sessions until acquisition criteria (≥30 active lever presses with ≥70 % responding on the active lever in one session) was met and divided rats into Early and Late groups by median-split analysis based on their latency to meet acquisition criteria. After each rat met acquisition criteria, we gave them 10 additional daily cocaine self-administration sessions. We then conducted a progressive ratio, cocaine-induced locomotor sensitivity test, and non-reinforced cocaine seeking test after two weeks of forced abstinence. Early Learners exhibited significantly less locomotion after an acute injection of cocaine, but the groups did not differ in any other behavioral parameter examined. These results indicate that cocaine self-administration acquisition latency is not predictive of subsequent drug-taking behavior, but may be linked to physiological factors like drug sensitivity that can predispose rats to learn the operant task.
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Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Language: En Journal: Behav Brain Res Year: 2024 Document type: Article

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Language: En Journal: Behav Brain Res Year: 2024 Document type: Article