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Extended nicotine self‐administration increases sensitivity to nicotine, motivation to seek nicotine and the reinforcing properties of nicotine‐paired cues.
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AbstractAn array of pharmacological and environmental factors influence the development and maintenance of tobacco addiction. The nature of these influences likely changes across the course of an extended smoking history, during which time drug seeking can become involuntary and uncontrolled. The present study used an animal model to examine the factors that drive nicotine‐seeking behavior after either brief (10 days) or extended (40 days) self‐administration training. In Experiment 1, extended training increased rats' sensitivity to nicotine, indicated by a leftward shift in the dose–response curve, and their motivation to work for nicotine, indicated by an increase in the break point achieved under a progressive ratio schedule. In Experiment 2, extended training imbued the nicotine‐paired cue with the capacity to maintain responding to the same high level as nicotine itself. However, Experiment 3 showed that the mechanisms involved in responding for nicotine or a nicotine‐paired cue are dissociable, as treatment with the partial nicotine receptor agonist, varenicline, suppressed responding for nicotine but potentiated responding for the nicotine‐paired cue. Hence, across extended nicotine self‐administration, pharmacological and environmental influences over nicotine seeking increase such that nicotine seeking is controlled by multiple sources, and therefore highly resistant to change.
Title: Extended nicotine self‐administration increases sensitivity to nicotine, motivation to seek nicotine and the reinforcing properties of nicotine‐paired cues.
Description:
AbstractAn array of pharmacological and environmental factors influence the development and maintenance of tobacco addiction.
The nature of these influences likely changes across the course of an extended smoking history, during which time drug seeking can become involuntary and uncontrolled.
The present study used an animal model to examine the factors that drive nicotine‐seeking behavior after either brief (10 days) or extended (40 days) self‐administration training.
In Experiment 1, extended training increased rats' sensitivity to nicotine, indicated by a leftward shift in the dose–response curve, and their motivation to work for nicotine, indicated by an increase in the break point achieved under a progressive ratio schedule.
In Experiment 2, extended training imbued the nicotine‐paired cue with the capacity to maintain responding to the same high level as nicotine itself.
However, Experiment 3 showed that the mechanisms involved in responding for nicotine or a nicotine‐paired cue are dissociable, as treatment with the partial nicotine receptor agonist, varenicline, suppressed responding for nicotine but potentiated responding for the nicotine‐paired cue.
Hence, across extended nicotine self‐administration, pharmacological and environmental influences over nicotine seeking increase such that nicotine seeking is controlled by multiple sources, and therefore highly resistant to change.
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