Abstract
Besides food intake reduction, activation of the amylin pathway by salmon calcitonin (sCT), an amylin and calcitonin receptor agonist, inhibits alcohol-mediated behaviors in rodents. This involves brain areas processing reward, i.e. the laterodorsal (LDTg), ventral tegmental area (VTA) and nucleus accumbens (NAc). However, the effects of stimulation of the amylin pathway on behaviors caused by cocaine and the brain areas involved in these processes have not yet been investigated. We therefore explored in male mice, the effects of systemic administration of sCT on cocaine-induced locomotor stimulation, dopamine release in the NAc and cocaine reward, as well as reward-dependent memory of cocaine, in the conditioned place preference (CPP) paradigm. Moreover, the outcome of systemic sCT and cocaine co-administration for five days on locomotor activity was investigated. Lastly, the impact of sCT infusions into the LDTg, VTA, NAc shell or core on cocaine-evoked locomotor stimulation was explored. We found that sCT attenuated cocaine-induced locomotor stimulation and accumbal dopamine release, without altering cocaine's rewarding properties or reward-dependent memory retrieval in the CPP paradigm. Five days of cocaine administration caused locomotor stimulation in mice pre-treated with vehicle, but not with sCT. In mice infused with vehicle into the aforementioned reward-related areas, cocaine caused locomotor stimulation, a response that was not evident following sCT infusions. The current findings suggest a novel role for the amylinergic pathway as regulator of cocaine-evoked activation of the mesolimbic dopamine system, opening the way for the investigation of the amylin signalling in the modulation of other drugs of abuse.
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