Journal article
Glutamatergic mechanisms of comorbidity between acute stress and cocaine self-administration
C Garcia-Keller, YM Kupchik, CD Gipson, RM Brown, S Spencer, F Bollati, MA Esparza, DJ Roberts-Wolfe, JA Heinsbroek, AC Bobadilla, LM Cancela, PW Kalivas
Molecular Psychiatry | NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP | Published : 2016
DOI: 10.1038/mp.2015.151
Abstract
There is substantial comorbidity between stress disorders and substance use disorders (SUDs), and acute stress augments the locomotor stimulant effect of cocaine in animal models. Here we endeavor to understand the neural underpinnings of comorbid stress disorders and drug use by determining whether the glutamatergic neuroadaptations that characterize cocaine self-administration are induced by acute stress. Rats were exposed to acute (2 h) immobilization stress, and 3 weeks later the nucleus accumbens core was examined for changes in glutamate transport, glutamate-mediated synaptic currents and dendritic spine morphology. We also determined whether acute stress potentiated the acquisition of..
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Awarded by National Institute on Drug Abuse
Funding Acknowledgements
This work was supported by grants from NIDA DA015369 (to PWK), DA012513 (to PWK), FONCyT PICT1867 (to LMC), CONICET PID 11420110100354 (to LMC) and SECyT 203/14 (to LMC).