The A2a adenosine receptor modulates the reinforcement efficacy and neurotoxicity of MDMA.

J Psychopharmacol

Grup de Recerca en Neurobiologia del Comportament (GRNC), Departament de Ciències Experimentals i de la Salut, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona, Spain.

Published: April 2011

AI Article Synopsis

  • Adenosine is important in the brain's modulation of processes like reward and inflammation, particularly through A2a receptors.
  • The study focused on how A2a receptors influence the effects of MDMA (a popular recreational drug) in terms of physical reactions, addiction potential, and neurotoxicity.
  • Results showed that while MDMA affected both normal and A2a knockout mice in terms of body temperature and activity, only wild-type mice continued to self-administer the drug, indicating the A2a receptors are crucial for both reinforcement and inflammation associated with MDMA use.

Article Abstract

Adenosine is an endogenous purine nucleoside that plays a neuromodulatory role in the central nervous system. A2a adenosine receptors have been involved in reward-related processes, inflammatory phenomena and neurotoxicity reactions. In the present study, we investigated the role of A2a adenosine receptors on the acute pharmacological effects, reinforcement and neuroinflammation induced by MDMA administration. First, the acute effects of MDMA on body temperature, locomotor activity and anxiety-like responses were measured in A2a knockout mice and wild-type littermates. Second, MDMA reinforcing properties were evaluated using the intravenous self-administration paradigm. Finally, we assessed striatal astrogliosis and microgliosis as markers of MDMA neurotoxicity. Our results showed that acute MDMA produced a biphasic effect on body temperature and increased locomotor activity and anxiogenic-like responses in both genotypes. However, MDMA reinforcing properties were dramatically affected by the lack of A2a adenosine receptors. Thus, wild-type mice maintained MDMA self-administration under a fixed ratio 1 reinforcement schedule, whereas the operant response appeared completely abolished in A2a knockout mice. In addition, the MDMA neurotoxic regime produced an enhanced inflammatory response in striatum of wild-type mice, revealed by a significant increase in glial expression, whereas such activation was attenuated in mutant mice. This is the first report indicating that A2a adenosine receptors play a key role in reinforcement and neuroinflammation induced by the widely used psychostimulant.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0269881110389210DOI Listing

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