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Exploring behavioral and molecular mechanisms of nicotine reward in adolescent mice.

Biochemical Pharmacology(2011)

Cited 21|Views5
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Abstract
Tobacco smoking during adolescence has become a prominent preventable health problem faced in the United States. Addictive properties of smoking are thought to have a pronounced effect at a young age, thereby increasing vulnerability to a life-long addiction and decreasing the likelihood of smoking cessation during adulthood. Learning and memory involvement in nicotine reward was assessed in early adolescent (PND 28–34) and adult (PND 70+) male ICR mice by conducting conditioning sessions of nicotine (0.5mg/kg) acquisition at varying time-spans, and evaluating extinction and reinstatement of nicotine preference using Conditioned Place Preference. Acquisition studies resulted in a significant preference for nicotine after 3 days of conditioning for both age groups, but not after only 1 or 2 conditioning days. In the extinction study, adolescent mice exhibited preference for nicotine 72h after the last conditioning session, whereas preference for nicotine was extinct in adult mice by 72h. Reinstatement studies showed adolescent mice, but not adult mice, recovering nicotine preference after a priming injection of 0.1mg/kg nicotine on day 9 after the mice underwent extinction. No significant differences were found when nAChRs were quantified in both early adolescent and adult mice using binding techniques including cytisine sensitive, α-conotoxin-MII sensitive, and α-bungarotoxin sensitive nAChRs. Levels of striatal dopamine release were measured in both age groups using a dopamine release assay over a range of nicotine doses, which also resulted in no significant differences. More sensitive assays may facilitate in understanding the mechanisms of nicotine reward in adolescent mice.
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Key words
Nicotine,Adolescence,Reward,Conditioned place preference,Mice
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