Abstract

Rodent studies have proposed that adolescent susceptibility to substance use is at least partly due to adolescents experiencing reduced aversive effects of drugs compared to adults. We thus investigated methamphetamine (meth) conditioned place preference/aversion (CPP/CPA) in adolescent and adult mice in both sexes using a high dose of meth (3 mg/kg) or saline as controls. Mice tagged with green-fluorescent protein (GFP) at Drd1a or Drd2 were used so that dopamine receptor 1 (D1) and 2 (D2) expression within the insular cortex (insula) could be quantified. There are sex differences in how the density of D1+ and D2+ cells in the insula changes across adolescence that may be related to drug-seeking behaviors. Immunohistochemistry followed by stereology were used to quantify the density of cells with c-Fos and/or GFP in the insula. Unexpectedly, mice showed huge variability in behaviors including CPA, CPP, or no preference or aversion. Females were less likely to show CPP compared to males, but no age differences in behavior were observed. Conditioning with meth increased the number of D2 + cells co-labelled with c-Fos in adults but not in adolescents. D1:D2 ratio also sex- and age-dependently changed due to meth compared to saline. These findings suggest that reduced aversion to meth is unlikely an explanation for adolescent vulnerability to meth use. Sex- and age-specific expressions of insula D1 and D2 are changed by meth injections, which has implications for subsequent meth use.

Highlights

  • Methamphetamine is a highly addictive amphetaminetype psychostimulant that is the second most commonly used illicit drug in the world [1]

  • Because Time interacted with all the other factors, post hoc analysis of variance (ANOVA) per Time were conducted to investigate the distance travelled in the morning sessions or the afternoon sessions

  • No other effects or interactions were detected. This Age x Sex interaction indicated that averaged across Day and Group, adolescent females moved more than adolescent males (F(1,79)=5.6, p=0.02); no significant sex difference was evident in adults (F(1,76)=0.3, p=0.61)

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Summary

Introduction

Methamphetamine (meth) is a highly addictive amphetaminetype psychostimulant that is the second most commonly used illicit drug in the world [1]. Compared to other addictive substances, prevalence of meth use in males is not always higher than females [5,6,7,8], and females begin using meth earlier and transition more rapidly from initial to problematic meth use [9,10,11,12,13]. These observations indicate that both age and sex are important factors in meth use disorder. Sex- and agedependent effects of meth on brain and behavior are poorly understood

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