Abstract

Kappa opioid receptor (KOR) agonists have known anti-addiction properties and can reduce drug seeking. Their potential for clinical use has largely been daunted by their aversive properties mediated through p38 MAPK signaling. Here we examined the therapeutic potential of the KOR agonist U50,488 (U50) to reduce cocaine seeking in a self-administration model. Following cocaine self-administration and 7 days of forced home-cage abstinence, rats were administered a single dose of U50 (5 mg/kg, i.p.) 30 min prior to the first extinction training session, wherein cocaine and the discrete cocaine-paired cues were no longer available. U50 reduced cocaine seeking on this first extinction session, but did not alter extinction training over subsequent days. 2 weeks after U50 treatment, rats underwent a test of cue-induced reinstatement, and rats that had received U50 reinstated less than controls. Central inhibition of p38 MAPK at the time of U50 administration prevented its long-term therapeutic effect on reinstatement, but not its acute reduction in drug seeking on extinction day 1. The long-term therapeutic effect of U50 required operant extinction during U50 exposure, extended to cocaine-primed reinstatement, and was not mimicked by another aversive drug, lithium chloride (LiCl). These data suggest U50 elicits its long-term anti-relapse effects through a KOR-p38 MAPK-specific aversive counterconditioning of the operant cocaine-seeking response. A single, albeit aversive treatment that is able to reduce relapse long-term warrants further consideration of the therapeutic potential of KOR agonists in the treatment of addiction.

Highlights

  • Cocaine relapse can be triggered by multiple factors, including conditioned cues that act as reminders of the drug experience, and stress [1]

  • By extension of this same logic, p38 mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPK) inhibitors co-administered with kappa opioid receptor (KOR) agonists, a strategy we employed in the present study, should prevent KOR-mediated aversion, and prevent U50induced conditioned place aversion (CPA) [7]

  • 1496 DISCUSSION The present study identifies the therapeutic efficacy of activating KORs in conjunction with extinction training to reduce cocaine relapse induced by cocaine-conditioned cues

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Cocaine relapse can be triggered by multiple factors, including conditioned cues that act as reminders of the drug experience, and stress [1]. Beta-arrestin signaling activates p38 mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPK), which has been implicated in the aversive and dysphoric effects of KOR agonists [6,7,13,14,15]. Current treatment strategies are focused on the development of functionally selective or biased agonists that avoid the beta-arrestin/p38 MAPK signaling pathway, to improve tolerability [16,17,18,19]. By extension of this same logic, p38 MAPK inhibitors co-administered with KOR agonists, a strategy we employed in the present study, should prevent KOR-mediated aversion, and prevent U50induced conditioned place aversion (CPA) [7]

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call