Involvement of the olfactory tubercle in cocaine reward: intracranial self-administration studies.
نویسنده
چکیده
Cocaine has multiple actions and multiple sites of action in the brain. Evidence from pharmacological studies indicates that it is the ability of cocaine to block dopamine uptake and elevate extracellular dopamine concentrations, and thus increase dopaminergic receptor activation, that makes cocaine rewarding. Lesion studies have implicated the nucleus accumbens (the dorsal portion of the "ventral striatum") as the probable site of the rewarding action of the drug. However, the drug is only marginally self-administered into this site. We now report that cocaine (60 or 200 mm in 75 nl/infusion) is readily self-administered into the olfactory tubercle, the most ventral portion of the ventral striatum. Cocaine (200 mm) was self-administered marginally into the accumbens shell but not into the core, dorsal striatum, or ventral pallidum. In addition, cocaine injections (200 mm in 300 nl) into the tubercle but not the shell or ventral pallidum induced conditioned place preference. Rewarding effects of cocaine in the tubercle were blocked by coadministration of dopamine D1 or D2 antagonists (1 mm SCH 23390 or 3 mm raclopride) and were not mimicked by injections of the local anesthetic procaine (800 mm). In conclusion, the tubercle plays a critical role in mediating rewarding action of cocaine.
منابع مشابه
Olfactory tubercle neurons exhibit slow-phasic firing patterns during cocaine self-administration.
The Olfactory Tubercle (OT) shares many relevant similarities to the Nucleus accumbens (NAcc). While both the structures have been implicated in the rewarding properties of drugs, the OT has not been as thoroughly investigated with regard to reward processing. Anatomical and cellular studies have revealed that both the NAcc and OT share continuous stretches of medium spiny neurons. Moreover, pr...
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عنوان ژورنال:
- The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience
دوره 23 28 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2003