Abstract

To study the simultaneous effects of ethanol and cocaine on striatal FOS-like protein, rats were exposed to an (8.7%) ethanol solution for 15 days followed by single or daily cocaine injections (20 mg/kg; IP). Ethanol consumption reduced the induction of the nuclear protein under both temporal regimens of cocaine administration. In contrast, sucrose pair-fed or ad libitum control groups exhibited a robust induction of FOS-like protein throughout the striatum, particularly in dorsal-central quadrants of the caudate putamen. This pattern of combined drug use produced blood ethanol concentrations in the range of 22-370 mg/dl, corresponding with those associated with mild intoxication in humans. Under both cocaine regimens, the presence of ethanol led to the transesterification of cocaine into the active metabolite, cocaethylene (31-121 ng/ml). Plasma levels of this metabolite did not exceed those of cocaine (17-1024 ng/ml), suggesting that under this drug regimen at least, cocaethylene formation is relatively low and perhaps dependent upon specific levels of ethanol and cocaine in hepatic microsomes. In addition, systemic administration of cocaethylene to rats (60 mumol/kg; molar equivalent of 20 mg/kg cocaine) induced widespread FOS-like protein in the caudate putamen. Induction of the transcription factor protein by cocaethylene was similar in magnitude and anatomic distribution to that of cocaine, suggesting that these two drug congeners share common molecular mechanisms of gene expression.

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