Locomotor- and Reward-Enhancing Effects of Cocaine Are Differentially Regulated by Chemogenetic Stimulation of Gi-Signaling in Dopaminergic Neurons

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Locomotor- and Reward-Enhancing Effects of Cocaine Are Differentially Regulated by Chemogenetic Stimulation of Gi-Signaling in Dopaminergic Neurons. / Runegaard, Annika H; Sørensen, Andreas T; Fitzpatrick, Ciarán M; Jørgensen, Søren H; Petersen, Anders V; Hansen, Nikolaj W; Weikop, Pia; Andreasen, Jesper T; Mikkelsen, Jens D; Perrier, Jean-Francois; Woldbye, David; Rickhag, Mattias; Wortwein, Gitta; Gether, Ulrik.

In: eNeuro, Vol. 5, No. 3, e0345, 2018.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Runegaard, AH, Sørensen, AT, Fitzpatrick, CM, Jørgensen, SH, Petersen, AV, Hansen, NW, Weikop, P, Andreasen, JT, Mikkelsen, JD, Perrier, J-F, Woldbye, D, Rickhag, M, Wortwein, G & Gether, U 2018, 'Locomotor- and Reward-Enhancing Effects of Cocaine Are Differentially Regulated by Chemogenetic Stimulation of Gi-Signaling in Dopaminergic Neurons', eNeuro, vol. 5, no. 3, e0345. https://doi.org/10.1523/ENEURO.0345-17.2018

APA

Runegaard, A. H., Sørensen, A. T., Fitzpatrick, C. M., Jørgensen, S. H., Petersen, A. V., Hansen, N. W., Weikop, P., Andreasen, J. T., Mikkelsen, J. D., Perrier, J-F., Woldbye, D., Rickhag, M., Wortwein, G., & Gether, U. (2018). Locomotor- and Reward-Enhancing Effects of Cocaine Are Differentially Regulated by Chemogenetic Stimulation of Gi-Signaling in Dopaminergic Neurons. eNeuro, 5(3), [e0345]. https://doi.org/10.1523/ENEURO.0345-17.2018

Vancouver

Runegaard AH, Sørensen AT, Fitzpatrick CM, Jørgensen SH, Petersen AV, Hansen NW et al. Locomotor- and Reward-Enhancing Effects of Cocaine Are Differentially Regulated by Chemogenetic Stimulation of Gi-Signaling in Dopaminergic Neurons. eNeuro. 2018;5(3). e0345. https://doi.org/10.1523/ENEURO.0345-17.2018

Author

Runegaard, Annika H ; Sørensen, Andreas T ; Fitzpatrick, Ciarán M ; Jørgensen, Søren H ; Petersen, Anders V ; Hansen, Nikolaj W ; Weikop, Pia ; Andreasen, Jesper T ; Mikkelsen, Jens D ; Perrier, Jean-Francois ; Woldbye, David ; Rickhag, Mattias ; Wortwein, Gitta ; Gether, Ulrik. / Locomotor- and Reward-Enhancing Effects of Cocaine Are Differentially Regulated by Chemogenetic Stimulation of Gi-Signaling in Dopaminergic Neurons. In: eNeuro. 2018 ; Vol. 5, No. 3.

Bibtex

@article{3b5ea150ff304673aded873317260c39,
title = "Locomotor- and Reward-Enhancing Effects of Cocaine Are Differentially Regulated by Chemogenetic Stimulation of Gi-Signaling in Dopaminergic Neurons",
abstract = "Dopamine plays a key role in the cellular and behavioral responses to drugs of abuse, but the implication of metabotropic regulatory input to dopaminergic neurons on acute drug effects and subsequent drug-related behavior remains unclear. Here, we used chemogenetics [Designer Receptors Exclusively Activated by Designer Drugs (DREADDs)] to modulate dopamine signaling and activity before cocaine administration in mice. We show that chemogenetic inhibition of dopaminergic ventral tegmental area (VTA) neurons differentially affects locomotor and reward-related behavioral responses to cocaine. Stimulation of Gi-coupled DREADD (hM4Di) expressed in dopaminergic VTA neurons persistently reduced the locomotor response to repeated cocaine injections. An attenuated locomotor response was seen even when a dual-viral vector approach was used to restrict hM4Di expression to dopaminergic VTA neurons projecting to the nucleus accumbens. Surprisingly, despite the attenuated locomotor response, hM4Di-mediated inhibition of dopaminergic VTA neurons did not prevent cocaine sensitization, and the inhibitory effect of hM4Di-mediated inhibition was eliminated after withdrawal. In the conditioned place-preference paradigm, hM4Di-mediated inhibition did not affect cocaine-induced place preference; however, the extinction period was extended. Also, hM4Di-mediated inhibition had no effect on preference for a sugar-based reward over water but impaired motivation to work for the same reward in a touchscreen-based motivational assay. In addition, to support that VTA dopaminergic neurons operate as regulators of reward motivation toward both sugar and cocaine, our data suggest that repeated cocaine exposure leads to adaptations in the VTA that surmount the ability of Gi-signaling to suppress and regulate VTA dopaminergic neuronal activity.",
author = "Runegaard, {Annika H} and S{\o}rensen, {Andreas T} and Fitzpatrick, {Ciar{\'a}n M} and J{\o}rgensen, {S{\o}ren H} and Petersen, {Anders V} and Hansen, {Nikolaj W} and Pia Weikop and Andreasen, {Jesper T} and Mikkelsen, {Jens D} and Jean-Francois Perrier and David Woldbye and Mattias Rickhag and Gitta Wortwein and Ulrik Gether",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.1523/ENEURO.0345-17.2018",
language = "English",
volume = "5",
journal = "eNeuro",
issn = "2373-2822",
publisher = "Society for Neuroscience",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Locomotor- and Reward-Enhancing Effects of Cocaine Are Differentially Regulated by Chemogenetic Stimulation of Gi-Signaling in Dopaminergic Neurons

AU - Runegaard, Annika H

AU - Sørensen, Andreas T

AU - Fitzpatrick, Ciarán M

AU - Jørgensen, Søren H

AU - Petersen, Anders V

AU - Hansen, Nikolaj W

AU - Weikop, Pia

AU - Andreasen, Jesper T

AU - Mikkelsen, Jens D

AU - Perrier, Jean-Francois

AU - Woldbye, David

AU - Rickhag, Mattias

AU - Wortwein, Gitta

AU - Gether, Ulrik

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - Dopamine plays a key role in the cellular and behavioral responses to drugs of abuse, but the implication of metabotropic regulatory input to dopaminergic neurons on acute drug effects and subsequent drug-related behavior remains unclear. Here, we used chemogenetics [Designer Receptors Exclusively Activated by Designer Drugs (DREADDs)] to modulate dopamine signaling and activity before cocaine administration in mice. We show that chemogenetic inhibition of dopaminergic ventral tegmental area (VTA) neurons differentially affects locomotor and reward-related behavioral responses to cocaine. Stimulation of Gi-coupled DREADD (hM4Di) expressed in dopaminergic VTA neurons persistently reduced the locomotor response to repeated cocaine injections. An attenuated locomotor response was seen even when a dual-viral vector approach was used to restrict hM4Di expression to dopaminergic VTA neurons projecting to the nucleus accumbens. Surprisingly, despite the attenuated locomotor response, hM4Di-mediated inhibition of dopaminergic VTA neurons did not prevent cocaine sensitization, and the inhibitory effect of hM4Di-mediated inhibition was eliminated after withdrawal. In the conditioned place-preference paradigm, hM4Di-mediated inhibition did not affect cocaine-induced place preference; however, the extinction period was extended. Also, hM4Di-mediated inhibition had no effect on preference for a sugar-based reward over water but impaired motivation to work for the same reward in a touchscreen-based motivational assay. In addition, to support that VTA dopaminergic neurons operate as regulators of reward motivation toward both sugar and cocaine, our data suggest that repeated cocaine exposure leads to adaptations in the VTA that surmount the ability of Gi-signaling to suppress and regulate VTA dopaminergic neuronal activity.

AB - Dopamine plays a key role in the cellular and behavioral responses to drugs of abuse, but the implication of metabotropic regulatory input to dopaminergic neurons on acute drug effects and subsequent drug-related behavior remains unclear. Here, we used chemogenetics [Designer Receptors Exclusively Activated by Designer Drugs (DREADDs)] to modulate dopamine signaling and activity before cocaine administration in mice. We show that chemogenetic inhibition of dopaminergic ventral tegmental area (VTA) neurons differentially affects locomotor and reward-related behavioral responses to cocaine. Stimulation of Gi-coupled DREADD (hM4Di) expressed in dopaminergic VTA neurons persistently reduced the locomotor response to repeated cocaine injections. An attenuated locomotor response was seen even when a dual-viral vector approach was used to restrict hM4Di expression to dopaminergic VTA neurons projecting to the nucleus accumbens. Surprisingly, despite the attenuated locomotor response, hM4Di-mediated inhibition of dopaminergic VTA neurons did not prevent cocaine sensitization, and the inhibitory effect of hM4Di-mediated inhibition was eliminated after withdrawal. In the conditioned place-preference paradigm, hM4Di-mediated inhibition did not affect cocaine-induced place preference; however, the extinction period was extended. Also, hM4Di-mediated inhibition had no effect on preference for a sugar-based reward over water but impaired motivation to work for the same reward in a touchscreen-based motivational assay. In addition, to support that VTA dopaminergic neurons operate as regulators of reward motivation toward both sugar and cocaine, our data suggest that repeated cocaine exposure leads to adaptations in the VTA that surmount the ability of Gi-signaling to suppress and regulate VTA dopaminergic neuronal activity.

U2 - 10.1523/ENEURO.0345-17.2018

DO - 10.1523/ENEURO.0345-17.2018

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 29938215

VL - 5

JO - eNeuro

JF - eNeuro

SN - 2373-2822

IS - 3

M1 - e0345

ER -

ID: 198773544