Publications by authors named "Bergman Jack"

Article Synopsis
  • Chronic adolescent cannabis use, specifically THC exposure, alters brain function and affects behavior, with potential long-lasting impacts into adulthood.
  • A study on squirrel monkeys showed significant changes in brain connectivity and reward processing after they were treated with THC during adolescence.
  • THC-treated monkeys displayed impaired motivation and reward sensitivity compared to those that received a vehicle, indicating persistent neurocognitive abnormalities linked to early cannabis use.
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Background: Deficits in cognitive control are implicated in numerous neuropsychiatric disorders. However, relevant pharmacological treatments are limited, likely due to weak translational validity of applicable preclinical models used. Neural indices derived from electroencephalography may prove useful in comparing and translating the effects of cognition-enhancing drugs between species.

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Naltrexone, an opioid antagonist that blocks the reinforcing properties of opioid agonists, is often prescribed to preclude relapse to opioid use disorder (OUD) following detoxification. However, few laboratory studies have directly investigated the ability of naltrexone to alter relapse-inducing effects of opioid agonists, including their priming strength in reinstatement studies and their impact in brain regions known to be involved in drug-induced reinforcement in MRI studies. Here we directly address this issue by investigating the effects of continuous exposure to naltrexone on 1) fentanyl-induced reinstatement of drug-seeking behavior, 2) fentanyl-induced patterns of blood oxygenation level dependent (BOLD) activation in the nucleus accumbens (NAcc), and 3) fentanyl-induced changes in NAcc functional connectivity (FC) in awake non-human primates that are engaged in ongoing opioid self-administration studies.

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Resting-state networks (RSNs) are increasingly forwarded as candidate biomarkers for neuropsychiatric disorders. Such biomarkers may provide objective measures for evaluating novel therapeutic interventions in nonhuman primates often used in translational neuroimaging research. This study aimed to characterize the RSNs of awake squirrel monkeys and compare the characteristics of those networks in adolescent and adult subjects.

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In brain, the striatum is a heterogenous region involved in reward and goal-directed behaviors. Striatal dysfunction is linked to psychiatric disorders, including opioid use disorder (OUD). Striatal subregions are divided based on neuroanatomy, each with unique roles in OUD.

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Earlier age of cannabis usage poses higher risk of Cannabis Use Disorder and adverse consequences, such as addiction, anxiety, dysphoria, psychosis, largely attributed to its principal psychoactive component, Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and altered dopaminergic function. As dopamine D1-D2 receptor heteromer activation causes anxiety and anhedonia, this signaling complex was postulated to contribute to THC-induced affective symptoms. To investigate this, we administered THC repeatedly to adolescent monkeys and adolescent or adult rats.

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The failure of preclinical research to advance successful candidate medications in psychiatry has created a paradigmatic crisis in psychiatry. The Research Domain Criteria (RDoC) initiative was designed to remedy this situation with a neuroscience-based approach that employs multimodal and cross-species in vivo methodology to increase the probability of translational findings and, consequently, drug discovery. The present review underscores the feasibility of this methodological approach by briefly reviewing, first, the use of multidimensional and cross-species methodologies in traditional behavioral pharmacology and, subsequently, the utility of this approach in contemporary neuroimaging and electrophysiology research-with a focus on the value of functionally homologous studies in nonhuman and human subjects.

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Opioid addiction is a chronic relapsing disorder in which drug-seeking behavior during abstinence can be provoked by exposure to a -opioid receptor (MOR) agonist or opioid-associated cues. Opioid self-administration behavior in laboratory subjects can be reinstated by priming with MOR agonists or agonist-related stimuli, providing a procedure suitable for relapse-related studies. The opioid antagonist naltrexone has been forwarded as a medication that can forestall relapse and, in an extended-release formulation, has demonstrated some treatment success.

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All possible diastereomeric C9-hydroxymethyl-, hydroxyethyl-, and hydroxypropyl-substituted 5-phenylmorphans were synthesized to explore the three-dimensional space around the C9 substituent in our search for potent MOR partial agonists. These compounds were designed to lessen the lipophilicity observed with their C9-alkenyl substituted relatives. Many of the 12 diastereomers that were obtained were found to have nanomolar or subnanomolar potency in the forskolin-induced cAMP accumulation assay.

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Unlabelled: Resting state networks (RSNs) are increasingly forwarded as candidate biomarkers for neuropsychiatric disorders. Such biomarkers may provide objective measures for evaluating novel therapeutic interventions in nonhuman primates often used in translational neuroimaging research. This study aimed to characterize the RSNs of awake squirrel monkeys and compare the characteristics of those networks in adolescent and adult subjects.

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Aim: There is increasing concern that cannabinoid exposure during adolescence may disturb brain maturation and produce long-term cognitive deficits. However, studies in human subjects have provided limited evidence for such causality. The present study utilized behavioral and neuroimaging endpoints in female non-human primates to examine the effects of acute and chronic exposure during adolescence to the cannabinoid receptor full agonist, AM2389, on cognitive processing and brain function and chemistry.

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Four sets of diastereomeric C9-alkenyl 5-phenylmorphans, varying in the length of the C9-alkenyl chain, were designed to examine the effect of these spatially distinct ligands on opioid receptors. Functional activity was obtained by forskolin-induced cAMP accumulation assays and several compounds were examined in the [S]GTPgS assay and in an assay for respiratory depression. In each of the four sets, similarities and differences were observed dependent on the length of their C9-alkenyl chain and, most importantly, their stereochemistry.

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Rationale: Modafinil has been proposed as a potentially effective clinical treatment for neuropsychiatric disorders characterized by cognitive control deficits. However, the precise effects of modafinil, particularly on brain network functions, are not completely understood.

Objectives: To address this gap, we examined the effects of modafinil on resting-state brain activity in 30 healthy adults using microstate analysis.

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Cessation of cannabinoid use in humans often leads to a withdrawal state that includes sleep disruption. Despite important health implications, little is known about how cannabinoid abstention affects sleep architecture, in part because spontaneous cannabinoid withdrawal is difficult to model in animals. In concurrent work we report that repeated administration of the high-efficacy cannabinoid 1 (CB1) receptor agonist AM2389 to mice for 5 days led to heightened locomotor activity and paw tremor following treatment discontinuation, potentially indicative of spontaneous cannabinoid withdrawal.

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Although the behavioral effects of acute and chronic exposure to cannabinoids have been extensively studied in mice, spontaneous withdrawal following exposure to cannabinoids has not been well characterized in this species. To address this issue, different groups of mice were treated for 5 days with saline, 20-36 mg/kg/day of the CB partial agonist Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol (Δ9-THC), or 0.06-0.

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Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) has been used to study the influence of opioids on neural circuitry implicated in opioid use disorder, such as the cortico-striatal-thalamo-cortical (CSTC) circuit. Given the increase in fentanyl-related deaths, this study was conducted to characterize the effects of fentanyl on patterns of brain activation in awake nonhuman primates. Four squirrel monkeys were acclimated to awake scanning procedures conducted at 9.

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There is substantial evidence that cholinergic system function impairment plays a significant role in many central nervous system (CNS) disorders. During the past three decades, muscarinic receptors (mAChRs) have been implicated in various pathologies and have been prominent targets of drug-design efforts. However, due to the high sequence homology of the orthosteric binding site, many drug candidates resulted in limited clinical success.

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Errors in performance trigger cognitive and neural changes that are implemented to adaptively adjust to fluctuating demands. Error-related alpha suppression (ERAS)-which refers to decreased power in the alpha frequency band after an incorrect response-is thought to reflect cognitive arousal after errors. Much of this work has been correlational, however, and there are no direct investigations into its pharmacological sensitivity.

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Challenges in therapeutics development for neuropsychiatric disorders can be attributed, in part, to a paucity of translational models capable of capturing relevant phenotypes across clinical populations and laboratory animals. Touch-sensitive procedures are increasingly used to develop innovative animal models that better align with testing conditions used in human participants. In addition, advances in electrophysiological techniques have identified neurophysiological signatures associated with characteristics of neuropsychiatric illness.

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Background: Synthetic cathinones display overlapping behavioral effects with psychostimulants (e.g., methamphetamine [MA]) and/or entactogens (e.

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Progress towards understanding neural mechanisms in humans relevant to psychiatric conditions has been hindered by a lack of translationally-relevant cognitive tasks for laboratory animals. Accordingly, there is a critical need to develop parallel neurophysiological assessments of domains of cognition, such as cognitive control, in humans and laboratory animals. To address this, we developed a touchscreen-based cognitive (Eriksen Flanker) task in rats and used its key characteristics to construct a novel human version, with similar testing parameters and endpoints across species.

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The cholinergic nervous system has been implicated in mood disorders, evident in the fast-onset antidepressant effects of scopolamine, a potent muscarinic antagonist, in clinical studies. One prominent disadvantage of the use of scopolamine in the treatment of depression is its detrimental effects on cognition, especially as such effects might aggravate cognitive deficits that occur with depression itself. Thus, the identification of antimuscarinic drugs that are free of such detrimental effects may provide an important avenue for the development of novel therapeutics for the management of depression.

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Background: Daily use of marijuana is rising in adolescents, along with consumption of high potency marijuana products (high % Δ-9-tetrahydrocannabinol or THC). These dual, related trends have opened gaps in understanding the long-term effects of daily consumption of a high dose of THC in adolescents and whether a therapeutic dose of cannabidiol (CBD) modulates THC effects.

Methods: Adolescent squirrel monkeys (Saimiri boliviensis) were treated daily for four months with vehicle (n = 4), a high THC dose (1 mg/kg i.

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