Conditioning tastant and the acquisition of conditioned taste avoidance to drugs of abuse in DBA/2J mice

被引:24
作者
Risinger, FO
Boyce, JM
机构
[1] Oregon Hlth Sci Univ, Dept Behav Neurosci, Portland, OR 97201 USA
[2] Oregon Hlth Sci Univ, Portland Alcohol Res Ctr, Portland, OR 97201 USA
关键词
morphine; ethanol; cocaine; lithium chloride; conditioned taste aversion; DBA/2J mice;
D O I
10.1007/s00213-001-0973-2
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Rationale: Conditioned taste aversion (CTA) produced by drugs of abuse such as morphine and cocaine has been interpreted as representing the rewarding actions of these drugs. Evidence for this interpretation is based, in part, on findings in rats indicating saccharin is a more effective conditioning flavor compared to salt (NaCl). However, our studies with ethanol have found salt to be a highly effective conditioning flavor in mice. Objectives: The present series of studies examined the acquisition of CTA to morphine, ethanol, lithium chloride, and cocaine. Further, saccharin and salt were utilized in each experiment in order to determine effectiveness of each flavor to serve as a conditioning stimulus. Methods: In four separate experiments, adult male DBA/2J mice were acclimated to a 2 h/day water restriction regimen. Subsequently they received four conditioning trials consisting of 1 h access to either 0.15% w/v saccharin or 0.1 M salt followed by 0, 10 or 20 mg/kg morphine (experiment 1), 0, 2, or 4 g/kg ethanol (experiment 2), 0, 1.5 or 3.0 milliequivalents/kg lithium chloride (experiment 3) or 0, 10 or 20 mg/kg cocaine (experiment 4). A fifth flavor access period (trial 5) was not followed by drug exposure. Following trial 5, each subject received 24-h access to the conditioning flavor and water (two-bottle test 1). Control subjects (0 dose groups from each experiment) received a second two-bottle test with 24-h access to both saccharin and salt flavors. Results: Reduced flavor intake and reduced flavor preference was noted in all drug-paired groups in each experiment. However, more rapid development of CTA was seen with the saccharin flavor in morphine- or cocaine-paired groups. In contrast, ethanol-induced CTA appeared more rapidly with the salt flavor. Lithium-induced CTA was modest, and emerged equally with either flavor. Conclusions: CTA induced by morphine or cocaine in mice occurs in a similar pattern to that seen in rats, and these findings agree with an interpretation based on drug reward. In contrast, ethanol-induced CTA is more likely attributable to aversive effects.
引用
收藏
页码:225 / 232
页数:8
相关论文
共 48 条
[1]   ETHANOL-INDUCED CTA MEDIATED BY ACETALDEHYDE THROUGH CENTRAL CATECHOLAMINE ACTIVITY [J].
ARAGON, CMG ;
ABITBOL, M ;
AMIT, Z .
PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY, 1991, 103 (01) :74-77
[2]   Second-order conditioning detects unexpressed morphine-induced salt aversion [J].
Bevins, RA ;
Delzer, TA ;
Bardo, MT .
ANIMAL LEARNING & BEHAVIOR, 1996, 24 (02) :221-229
[3]   AVERSIVE CONDITIONING BY PSYCHOACTIVE DRUGS - EFFECTS OF MORPHINE, ALCOHOL AND CHLORDIAZEPOXIDE [J].
CAPPELL, H ;
LEBLANC, AE ;
ENDRENYI, L .
PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGIA, 1973, 29 (03) :239-246
[4]   CONDITIONED AVERSION TO SACCHARIN BY SINGLE ADMINISTRATIONS OF MESCALINE AND D-AMPHETAMINE [J].
CAPPELL, H ;
LEBLANC, AE .
PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGIA, 1971, 22 (04) :352-&
[5]   ESTABLISHMENT OF CHRONIC INTRAVENOUS DRUG SELF-ADMINISTRATION IN C57BL/6J MOUSE [J].
CARNEY, JM ;
LANDRUM, RW ;
CHENG, MS ;
SEALE, TW .
NEUROREPORT, 1991, 2 (08) :477-480
[6]   GENETIC-DIFFERENCES IN THE REWARDING AND ACTIVATING EFFECTS OF MORPHINE AND ETHANOL [J].
CUNNINGHAM, CL ;
NIEHUS, DR ;
MALOTT, DH ;
PRATHER, LK .
PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY, 1992, 107 (2-3) :385-393
[7]   Ethanol-induced conditioned place aversion in mice [J].
Cunningham, CL ;
Henderson, CM .
BEHAVIOURAL PHARMACOLOGY, 2000, 11 (7-8) :591-602
[8]   FLAVOR AND LOCATION AVERSIONS PRODUCED BY ETHANOL [J].
CUNNINGHAM, CL .
BEHAVIORAL AND NEURAL BIOLOGY, 1979, 27 (03) :362-367
[9]   NOVEL VERSUS FAMILIAR ETHANOL - A COMPARISON OF AVERSIVE AND REWARDING PROPERTIES [J].
DAVIES, BT ;
PARKER, LA .
ALCOHOL, 1990, 7 (06) :523-529
[10]   CONDITIONED TASTE-AVERSION AND OPERANT-BEHAVIOR IN RATS - EFFECTS OF COCAINE AND A COCAINE ANALOG (WIN 35,428) [J].
DMELLO, GD ;
GOLDBERG, DM ;
GOLDBERG, SR ;
STOLERMAN, IP .
NEUROPHARMACOLOGY, 1979, 18 (12) :1009-1010