AI Article Synopsis

  • Chronic morphine use negatively affects the ability to extinguish cued fear responses, potentially increasing the risk of anxiety disorders and relapse in opioid addiction.
  • Rats given chronic morphine showed impaired cued fear responses after fear conditioning, but forced exercise at light or moderate intensities helped improve their recovery by enhancing brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) levels.
  • The study suggests that moderate exercise can shift the balance between pro-apoptotic and anti-apoptotic proteins in the hippocampus, promoting cell survival and aiding in the rehabilitation of fear extinction impairments linked to chronic opioid use.

Article Abstract

Chronic morphine impairs cued fear extinction, which may contribute to the high prevalence of anxiety disorders and the replase of opiate addiction. This work investigated the effects of forced exercise with different intensities on cued fear extinction impairment and alternations of hippocampal BDNF and apoptotic proteins induced by chronic morphine. Rats were injected with bi-daily doses of morphine or saline for ten days and then received a cued or contextual fear conditioning training, which was followed by fear extinction training for four consecutive days. Cued, but the not contextual fear response was impaired in morphine-treated rats. Then, different saline or morphine-treated rats underwent forced exercise for 4-weeks with light, moderate or high intensities. Subsequently, rats received a cued fear conditioning followed by four days of extinction training, and the expression of hippocampal BDNF and apoptotic proteins was determined. A relatively long time after the last injection of morphine (35 days), rats again showed cued fear extinction failure and reduced hippocampal BDNF, which recovered by light and moderate, but not high exercise. Light and moderate, but not high-intensity treadmill exercise enhanced the up-regulation of Bcl-2 and down-regulation of the Bax proteins in both saline- and morphine-treated rats, which shifted the balance between pro-apoptotic and anti-apoptotic factors in favor of cell survival. These findings highlight the impact of exercise up to moderate intensity in the recovery of cued extinction failure, more likely via BDNF in addicted individuals.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bbr.2021.113732DOI Listing

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