Abstract
Relapse to drugs such as opioids is a major challenge in addiction therapy. It has been known that the orexinergic system has a significant role in mediating reward processing and addiction, as shown by the conditioned place preference (CPP). The dentate gyrus (DG) of the hippocampus receives orexinergic projections from the lateral hypothalamus that has been approved as a critical area arbitrating the maintenance of drug-seeking behavior following the extinction. The present study aimed to investigate the effects of intra-DG administration of the orexin-1 receptor (OX1R) and orexin-2 receptor (OX2R) antagonists on the extinction of morphine-induced CPP in male rats. Animals received different doses of SB334867 (as OX1R antagonist) or TCS OX2 29 (as OX2R antagonist) (0.5, 2.5, and 12.5 nM/0.5 μl DMSO 12 %) bilaterally into the DG during the extinction phase, after CPP had been induced by subcutaneous injection of morphine (5 mg/kg) during a 3-day conditioning phase. The conditioning scores were recorded during the test. The results demonstrated that intra-DG administration of the highest dose of OX1R antagonist (12.5 nM/0.5 μl DMSO 12 %) shortened the extinction latency of morphine-CPP compared to the DMSO group, while the OX2R antagonist did not significantly alter the latency. Findings imply that the blockade of OX1R, but not OX2R, within the DG facilitates the extinction of morphine-induced reward. In conclusion, the OX1R antagonist might be kept in mind as a convenient therapeutic factor in repressing drug-seeking behaviors in an optimum amount of treatment considering the low dose-treatments applied.
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