Artículos de revistas
Dorsal hippocampus plays a causal role in context-induced reinstatement of alcohol-seeking in rats
Fecha
2021-02-01Registro en:
Behavioural Brain Research, v. 398.
1872-7549
0166-4328
10.1016/j.bbr.2020.112978
2-s2.0-85095435300
2514762545280942
0000-0002-1378-6327
Autor
Universidade Federal de São Paulo (UNIFESP)
Universidade Federal de São Carlos (UFSCar)
Universidade Estadual Paulista (Unesp)
Universidade Federal de Uberlândia (UFU)
Institución
Resumen
Drug addiction is a chronic mental disorder characterized by frequent relapses. Contextual cues associated with drug use to play a critical causal role in drug-seeking behavior. The hippocampus has been implicated in encoding drug associative memories. Here we examine whether the dorsal hippocampus mediates context-induced reinstatement of alcohol-seeking. Male Long-Evans rats were trained to self-administer alcohol in Context A. Alcohol self-administration was extinguished in a distinct context (Context B). On the test day, animals were re-exposed to the alcohol Context A or the extinction Context B. Next, to assess a causal role for the dorsal hippocampus in context-induced alcohol-seeking, on the test day, we injected cobalt chloride (CoCl2; a nonselective synapse inhibitor) or vehicle into the dorsal hippocampus, and 15 min later, rats were tested by re-exposing them to the drug-associated context. The re-exposure to the alcohol-associated Context A reinstated alcohol seeking and increased Fos-positive cells in the dorsal hippocampus neurons (CA1, CA3, and Dentate Gyrus). Pharmacological inactivation with cobalt chloride of the dorsal hippocampus attenuated the reinstatement of alcohol-seeking. Our data suggest that the dorsal hippocampus may be involved in context-induced alcohol-seeking behavior.