Cocaine diminishes consolidation of cued fear memory in female rats through interactions with ventral hippocampal D2 receptors.

Autor: Gonzalez D; Neuroscience Program, Trinity University, San Antonio, TX, United States of America., Bensing PC; Neuroscience Program, Trinity University, San Antonio, TX, United States of America., Dixon KN; Neuroscience Program, Trinity University, San Antonio, TX, United States of America., Leong KC; Neuroscience Program, Trinity University, San Antonio, TX, United States of America. Electronic address: kleong@trinity.edu.
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Pharmacology, biochemistry, and behavior [Pharmacol Biochem Behav] 2024 Nov; Vol. 244, pp. 173863. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Aug 24.
DOI: 10.1016/j.pbb.2024.173863
Abstrakt: In addition to cocaine's addictive properties, cocaine use may lead to heightened risk-taking behavior. The disruptive effects of cocaine on aversive memory formation may underlie this behavior. The present study investigated the effects of cocaine on fear memory using a cued fear conditioning paradigm in female Sprague Dawley rats, and further determined the role of D2 receptors in modulating the effect of cocaine on cued fear expression. Animals received six evenly spaced shocks preceded by a tone. The following day, rats were returned to the fear chamber where tones, but no shocks, were delivered. In Experiment 1, separate or concurrent administrations of cocaine (15 mg/kg; i.p.) and the D2 receptor antagonist eticlopride (0.1 mg/kg; i.p.) were given immediately after conditioning trials. It was determined that cocaine administration during the consolidation period diminished the expression of cued fear during the subsequent test day. Concurrent eticlopride administration attenuated this effect, indicating the involvement of D2 receptors in the deleterious effects of cocaine on fear memory consolidation. In Experiment 2, eticlopride (0.05 μg) was infused directly into the ventral hippocampus (VH) after fear conditioning and before cocaine administration. Cocaine continued to disrupt consolidation of cued and contextual fear memory, and concurrent intra-VH eticlopride blocked this effect, thereby demonstrating that VH D2 receptors mediate cocaine-induced impairment of fear memory consolidation. Overall, the present study provides evidence that acute cocaine administration impairs aversive memory formation and establishes a potential circuit through which cocaine induces its detrimental effects on fear memory consolidation.
Competing Interests: Declarations of interest None.
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Databáze: MEDLINE