The duration of nicotine withdrawal-associated deficits in contextual fear conditioning parallels changes in hippocampal high affinity nicotinic acetylcholine receptor upregulation.
The duration of nicotine withdrawal-associated deficits in contextual fear conditioning parallels changes in hippocampal high affinity nicotinic acetylcholine receptor upregulation.
A predominant symptom of nicotine withdrawal is cognitive deficits, yet understanding of the neural basis for these deficits is limited. Withdrawal from chronic nicotine disrupts contextual learning in mice and this deficit is mediated by direct effects of nicotine in the hippocampus. Chronic nicotine treatment upregulates nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChR); however, it is unknown whether upregulation is related to the observed withdrawal-induced cognitive deficits. If a relationship between altered learning and nAChR levels exists, changes in nAChR levels after cessation of nicotine treatment should match the duration of learning deficits. To test this hypothesis, mice were chronically administered 6.3mg/kg/day (freebase) nicotine for 12 days and trained in contextual fear conditioning on day 11 or between 1 to 16 days after withdrawal of treatment. Changes in [(125)I]-epibatidine binding at cytisine-sensitive and cytisine-resistant nAChRs and chronic nicotine-related changes in ?4, ?7, and ?2 nAChR subunit mRNA expression were assessed. Chronic nicotine had no behavioral effect but withdrawal produced deficits in contextual fear conditioning that lasted 4 days. Nicotine withdrawal did not disrupt cued fear conditioning. Chronic nicotine upregulated hippocampal cytisine-sensitive nAChR binding; upregulation continued after cessation of nicotine administration and the duration of upregulation during withdrawal paralleled the duration of behavioral changes. Changes in binding in cortex and cerebellum did not match behavioral changes. No changes in ?4, ?7, and ?2 subunit mRNA expression were seen with chronic nicotine. Thus, nicotine withdrawal-related deficits in contextual learning are time-limited changes that are associated with temporal changes in upregulation of high-affinity nAChR binding.
nicotine, addiction, acetylcholine, learning, withdrawal, receptor binding
2118-2125
Gould, Thomas J
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Portugal, George S.
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André, Jessica M.
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Tadman, Matthew P.
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Marks, Michael J.
cdc33112-566c-4c2d-96a1-0688fc7f4454
Kenney, Justin W.
a498bbd6-750d-4778-bd72-6ea336c883e8
Yildirim, Emre
7d614dbc-a1fe-44f5-87ea-3f0cc4768f1d
Adoff, Michael
5bf06293-8fe3-47bd-a340-61f4953f1e48
April 2012
Gould, Thomas J
258bc1f5-917c-46f0-8e34-dfd99b777e67
Portugal, George S.
016470cf-55ba-4cf6-96ed-76758d51f71f
André, Jessica M.
d3098e8d-a478-47c9-b227-3dac92209a93
Tadman, Matthew P.
f88d85f2-8ecc-4b56-bf9a-594d7ad9abfe
Marks, Michael J.
cdc33112-566c-4c2d-96a1-0688fc7f4454
Kenney, Justin W.
a498bbd6-750d-4778-bd72-6ea336c883e8
Yildirim, Emre
7d614dbc-a1fe-44f5-87ea-3f0cc4768f1d
Adoff, Michael
5bf06293-8fe3-47bd-a340-61f4953f1e48
Gould, Thomas J, Portugal, George S., André, Jessica M., Tadman, Matthew P., Marks, Michael J., Kenney, Justin W., Yildirim, Emre and Adoff, Michael
(2012)
The duration of nicotine withdrawal-associated deficits in contextual fear conditioning parallels changes in hippocampal high affinity nicotinic acetylcholine receptor upregulation.
Neuropharmacology, 62 (5-6), .
(doi:10.1016/j.neuropharm.2012.01.003).
(PMID:22285742)
Abstract
A predominant symptom of nicotine withdrawal is cognitive deficits, yet understanding of the neural basis for these deficits is limited. Withdrawal from chronic nicotine disrupts contextual learning in mice and this deficit is mediated by direct effects of nicotine in the hippocampus. Chronic nicotine treatment upregulates nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChR); however, it is unknown whether upregulation is related to the observed withdrawal-induced cognitive deficits. If a relationship between altered learning and nAChR levels exists, changes in nAChR levels after cessation of nicotine treatment should match the duration of learning deficits. To test this hypothesis, mice were chronically administered 6.3mg/kg/day (freebase) nicotine for 12 days and trained in contextual fear conditioning on day 11 or between 1 to 16 days after withdrawal of treatment. Changes in [(125)I]-epibatidine binding at cytisine-sensitive and cytisine-resistant nAChRs and chronic nicotine-related changes in ?4, ?7, and ?2 nAChR subunit mRNA expression were assessed. Chronic nicotine had no behavioral effect but withdrawal produced deficits in contextual fear conditioning that lasted 4 days. Nicotine withdrawal did not disrupt cued fear conditioning. Chronic nicotine upregulated hippocampal cytisine-sensitive nAChR binding; upregulation continued after cessation of nicotine administration and the duration of upregulation during withdrawal paralleled the duration of behavioral changes. Changes in binding in cortex and cerebellum did not match behavioral changes. No changes in ?4, ?7, and ?2 subunit mRNA expression were seen with chronic nicotine. Thus, nicotine withdrawal-related deficits in contextual learning are time-limited changes that are associated with temporal changes in upregulation of high-affinity nAChR binding.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 20 January 2012
Published date: April 2012
Keywords:
nicotine, addiction, acetylcholine, learning, withdrawal, receptor binding
Organisations:
Centre for Biological Sciences
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Local EPrints ID: 339018
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/339018
ISSN: 0028-3908
PURE UUID: 9446bd5e-a719-4d34-9be1-da11324fab15
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Date deposited: 21 May 2012 15:33
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 11:08
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Author:
Thomas J Gould
Author:
George S. Portugal
Author:
Jessica M. André
Author:
Matthew P. Tadman
Author:
Michael J. Marks
Author:
Justin W. Kenney
Author:
Emre Yildirim
Author:
Michael Adoff
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