Abstract

Conditioned place preference (CPP) is a model to study the role of drug conditioning properties. In outbred strains, individual variability may affect some behavioral measures. However, there are few studies focusing on understanding how different phenotypes of ethanol conditioned behavior may influence its extinction, reinstatement, and behavioral adaptation measures. We used male Swiss Webster mice to study different phenotypes related to ethanol conditioning strength, reinstatement and behavioral sensitization. Mice went through a CPP procedure with ethanol (2.2 g/kg, i.p.). After that, one group of mice was submitted to repeated extinction sessions, while another group remained in their home cages without any drug treatment. Mice went through environmental and ethanol priming (1.0 g/kg, i.p.) reinstatement tests. Ethanol priming test reinstated the conditioned behavior only in the animals kept in the home-cage during the abstinence period. Besides, the ethanol conditioned behavior strength was positively correlated with the time required to be extinguished. In the second set of experiments, some mice went through a CPP protocol followed by behavioral sensitization (five i.p. administrations of ethanol 2.2 g/kg or saline per week, for 3 weeks) and another group of mice went through sensitization followed by CPP. No positive correlation was observed between ethanol CPP strength and the intensity of behavioral sensitization. Considering that different phenotypes observed in CPP strength predicted the variability in other CPP measures, we developed a statistics-based method to classify mice according to CPP strength to be used in the evaluation of ethanol conditioning properties.

Highlights

  • Ethanol abuse is a serious problem which afflicts society and has already been related to 3.8% of all deaths worldwide (Rehm et al, 2009; Laramee et al, 2013)

  • We investigated the relationship between the different phenotypes in the conditioned place preference (CPP) and behavioral sensitization models in order to assess whether the phenotypes would be expressed together or not

  • EXPERIMENT 2: CPP, EXTINCTION AND REINSTATEMENT For the extinction protocol, a repeated measures Analysis of Variance (ANOVA) considering group as the independent factor detected a significant effect of interaction between group and tests factors [F(1, 65) = 6.49, P < 0.05]

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Summary

Introduction

Ethanol abuse is a serious problem which afflicts society and has already been related to 3.8% of all deaths worldwide (Rehm et al, 2009; Laramee et al, 2013). Some major obstacles faced during ethanol dependence treatment are craving and relapse (George et al, 2012). Drug priming and context re-exposure are known to work as triggers for craving which may lead to relapse (Shalev et al, 2002; Bossert et al, 2005; George and Koob, 2011). Several experimental paradigms are used to evaluate drug rewarding effect, craving, relapse and environmental cues [for review see Sanchis-Segura and Spanagel (2006) and MartinFardon and Weiss (2013)] such as the conditioned place preference (CPP) (Cunningham et al, 2006). Through a classical Pavlovian conditioning, it is possible to evaluate the capacity of ethanol rewarding effect to induce changes in the conditioned behavior (Tzschentke, 1998, 2007). The CPP paradigm allows the study of environment-evoked relapse based on the animals’

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