Differential Involvement of Orbitofrontal Cortex Subregions in Conditioned Cue-Induced and Cocaine-Primed Reinstatement of Cocaine Seeking in Rats
Open Access
- 21 July 2004
- journal article
- Published by Society for Neuroscience in Journal of Neuroscience
- Vol. 24 (29) , 6600-6610
- https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.1924-04.2004
Abstract
Orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) damage elicits impulsivity and perseveration, and impairments in OFC function may underlie compulsive drug seeking in cocaine users. To test this hypothesis, we assessed the effects of fiber-sparing lesions or functional inactivation of OFC subregions on cocaine seeking in rats. Rats were trained to lever press for intravenous cocaine (0.20 mg/infusion) paired with the presentations of light plus tone stimuli. Responding was then allowed to extinguish. Rats received bilateral NMDA (0.1 M) or sham lesions of the lateral OFC (lOFC) or medial OFC (mOFC) before self-administration training (experiment 1) or muscimol plus baclofen (0.1 and 1.0 mM) or vehicle infusions into the lOFC or mOFC before reinstatement testing (experiment 2). The effects of these manipulations on reinstatement of cocaine seeking (i.e., responding on the previously cocaine-paired lever) were assessed in the presence of the light plus tone stimuli or after a cocaine priming injection (10 mg/kg, i.p.). Post-training lOFC inactivation impaired conditioned cue-induced reinstatement, whereas other manipulations failed to alter this behavior. This suggests that the lOFC plays a critical role in assessing the current motivational significance of cocaine-conditioned stimuli or in using this information to guide cocaine-seeking behavior if stimulus-reward learning takes place before lOFC damage. OFC inactivation failed to alter cocaine-primed reinstatement. However, lOFC lesions augmented cocaine-primed reinstatement in a perseverative manner, whereas mOFC lesions attenuated cocaine-primed reinstatement, suggesting that prolonged cell loss in OFC subregions may modulate the propensity for cocaine seeking in a subregion-specific manner.Keywords
This publication has 54 references indexed in Scilit:
- Differential Involvement of Orbitofrontal Cortex Subregions in Conditioned Cue-Induced and Cocaine-Primed Reinstatement of Cocaine Seeking in RatsJournal of Neuroscience, 2004
- Differential Roles of 5-HT Receptor Subtypes in Cue and Cocaine Reinstatement of Cocaine-Seeking Behavior in RatsNeuropsychopharmacology, 2003
- Potentiated Reinstatement of Cocaine-Seeking Behavior Following D-amphetamine Infusion into the Basolateral AmygdalaNeuropsychopharmacology, 2003
- Impairments of Reversal Learning and Response Perseveration after Repeated, Intermittent Cocaine Administrations to MonkeysPublished by Springer Nature ,2002
- Dissociation of Primary and Secondary Reward-Relevant Limbic Nuclei in an Animal Model of RelapseNeuropsychopharmacology, 2000
- Addiction, a Disease of Compulsion and Drive: Involvement of the Orbitofrontal CortexCerebral Cortex, 2000
- Insensitivity to future consequences following damage to human prefrontal cortexCognition, 1994
- Interaction of the Amygdala with the Frontal Lobe in Reward MemoryEuropean Journal of Neuroscience, 1993
- The role of the inferior prefrontal convexity in performance of delayed nonmatching-to-sampleNeuropsychologia, 1991
- Behavioural changes following lesions of the orbital prefrontal cortex in male ratsBehavioural Brain Research, 1983