Background: Several studies strongly support the role of the dopamine D-like and glutamate mGlu receptors in psychostimulant reward and relapse.

Methods: The present study employed cocaine or MDMA self-administration with yoked-triad procedure in rats to explore whether extinction training affects the drug-seeking behavior and the D-like and mGlu receptor B and K values in several regions of the animal brain.

Results: Both cocaine and MDMA rats developed maintenance of self-administration, but MDMA evoked lower response rates and speed of self-administration acquisition. During reinstatement tests, cocaine or MDMA seeking behavior was produced by either exposure to the drug-associated cues or drug-priming injections. The extinction training after cocaine self-administration did not alter significantly D-like receptor expression the in the limbic and subcortical brain areas, while MDMA yoked rats showed a decrease of the Dlike binding density in the nucleus accumbens and increase in the hippocampus and a rise of affinity in the striatum and hippocampus. Interestingly, in the prefrontal cortex a reduction in the mGlu receptor density in cocaine- or MDMA-abstinent rats was demonstrated, with significant effects being observed after previous MDMA exposure. Moreover, rats self-administered cocaine showed a rise in the density of mGlu receptor for the nucleus accumbens.

Conclusion: This study first time shows that abstinence followed extinction training after cocaine or MDMA self- or passive-injections changes the D-like and mGlu density and affinity. The observed changes in the expression of both receptors are brain-region specific and related to either pharmacological and/or motivational features of cocaine or MDMA.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pharep.2019.05.001DOI Listing

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