Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4180811 Biological Psychiatry 2008 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundRepeated exposure to cocaine produces enduring forms of drug experience-dependent behavioral plasticity, including conditioned place preference (CPP) and psychomotor sensitization, a progressive and persistent increase in cocaine’s psychomotor activating effects. Although serotonin-6 receptors (5-HT6Rs) are abundantly expressed in the brain regions thought to underlie these phenomena, such as the nucleus accumbens (NAc), surprisingly little is known about the role of 5-HT6Rs in the rewarding and psychomotor activating effects of cocaine.MethodsViral-mediated gene transfer was used to selectively increase 5-HT6R expression in the NAc of rats. The effects of 5-HT6R overexpression and the selective 5-HT6R antagonist Ro4368554 on CPP and psychomotor sensitization were examined.ResultsIncreased expression of 5-HT6Rs in the NAc blocks a CPP to cocaine but has no effect on either the acute locomotor response to cocaine or on the development of cocaine-induced locomotor sensitization. Furthermore, antagonism of 5-HT6Rs facilitates the acquisition of a CPP to cocaine but has no effect on cocaine-induced stereotypy.ConclusionsThese results demonstrate that 5-HT6Rs in the NAc can selectively modulate drug reward, possibly through facilitation of reward learning.

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