AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how the striatal cAMP responsive element binding protein (CREB) affects sensitivity to psychostimulants, specifically cocaine, by focusing on dopamine receptor D1 (D1R) neurons.
  • Compared to regular mice, those with a dominant-negative CREB protein variant showed changes in gene expression and heightened behavioral responses to cocaine, such as increased locomotor activity and cocaine-seeking behavior after drug withdrawal.
  • While the mutant mice displayed intensified responses to cocaine, the primary reinforcing effects of cocaine, like self-administration, remained unchanged compared to wild-type mice, indicating the variant's role in specific behavioral aspects rather than overall drug reinforcement.

Article Abstract

It is suggested that striatal cAMP responsive element binding protein (CREB) regulates sensitivity to psychostimulants. To test the cell-specificity of this hypothesis we examined the effects of a dominant-negative CREB protein variant expressed in dopamine receptor D1 (D1R) neurons on cocaine-induced behaviors. A transgenic mouse strain was generated by pronuclear injection of a BAC-derived transgene harboring the A-CREB sequence under the control of the D1R gene promoter. Compared to wild-type, drug-naïve mutants showed moderate alterations in gene expression, especially a reduction in basal levels of activity-regulated transcripts such as Arc and Egr2. The behavioral responses to cocaine were elevated in mutant mice. Locomotor activity after acute treatment, psychomotor sensitization after intermittent drug injections and the conditioned locomotion after saline treatment were increased compared to wild-type littermates. Transgenic mice had significantly higher cocaine conditioned place preference, displayed normal extinction of the conditioned preference, but showed an augmented cocaine-seeking response following priming-induced reinstatement. This enhanced cocaine-seeking response was associated with increased levels of activity-regulated transcripts and prodynorphin. The primary reinforcing effects of cocaine were not altered in the mutant mice as they did not differ from wild-type in cocaine self-administration under a fixed ratio schedule at the training dose. Collectively, our data indicate that expression of a dominant-negative CREB variant exclusively in neurons expressing D1R is sufficient to recapitulate the previously reported behavioral phenotypes associated with virally expressed dominant-negative CREB.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4052973PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnbeh.2014.00212DOI Listing

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