Abstract

Adverse early-life conditions induce persistent disturbances that give rise to negative emotional states. Therefore, early life stress confers increased vulnerability to substance use disorders, mainly during adolescence as the brain is still developing. In this study, we investigated the consequences of maternal separation, a model of maternal neglect, on the psychotropic effects of cocaine and the neuroplasticity of the dopaminergic system. Our results show that mice exposed to maternal separation displayed attenuated behavioural sensitization, while no changes were found in the rewarding effects of cocaine in the conditioned place preference paradigm and in the reinforcing effects of cocaine in the self-administration paradigm. The evaluation of neuroplasticity in the striatal dopaminergic pathways revealed that mice exposed to maternal separation exhibited decreased protein expression levels of D2 receptors and increased levels of the transcriptional factor Nurr1. Furthermore, animals exposed to maternal separation and treated with cocaine exhibited increased DA turnover and protein expression levels of DAT and D2R, while decreased Nurr1 and Pitx3 protein expression levels were observed when compared with saline-treated mice. Taken together, our data demonstrate that maternal separation caused an impairment of cocaine-induced behavioural sensitization possibly due to a dysfunction of the dopaminergic system, a dysfunction that has been proposed as a factor of vulnerability for developing substance use disorders.

Highlights

  • Adverse early life conditions have been associated with brain development alterations [1] increasing vulnerability to psychiatric disorders throughout life such as depression or substance use disorder [2,3,4]

  • The Bonferroni post-hoc test showed that acute and repeated cocaine administration increased locomotor activity in standard nest (SN) and maternal separation with early weaning (MSEW) groups of mice compared with the saline control group (p

  • The hyperlocomotion induced by repeated doses of cocaine on day 7 was lower in the MSEW group compared with the SN group (p

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Summary

Introduction

Adverse early life conditions have been associated with brain development alterations [1] increasing vulnerability to psychiatric disorders throughout life such as depression or substance use disorder [2,3,4]. In this situation, maternal separation with early weaning has been proposed as an early life stress model that produces behavioural alterations related to mood disorders in adolescent mice that persist in adulthood [5,6]. Recent theories propose that drugs of abuse are used in efforts to self-medicate during emotional disorders to relieve feelings of sadness and anhedonia [8]. PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0167483 December 9, 2016

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