Abstract

Initiation of smoking behavior typically occurs during adolescence and rarely occurs during adulthood. Despite this epidemiological evidence, relatively little is known about possible neurobiological differences in the response to nicotine in adolescents that might make them more vulnerable to nicotine addiction. In the current study, we assessed nicotine self-administration under fixed ratio (FR) and progressive ratio (PR) reinforcement schedules in adolescent (postnatal day (P) 33-35) and adult (P91-94) rats. We then assessed extinction and reinstatement of nicotine seeking in adulthood in rats that initiated nicotine self-administration during either adolescence or adulthood. Nicotine self-administration (0.03 mg/kg/infusion, i.v.) was higher in adult rats than in adolescent rats under FR5 and PR reinforcement schedules; no age differences in nicotine self-administration were observed under FR1 or FR2 reinforcement schedules. In contrast, saccharin self-administration under FR5 and PR reinforcement schedules was similar in both age groups, potentially ruling out age differences in general performance. Rats that initiated nicotine self-administration as adults demonstrated a greater resistance to extinction of nicotine taking behavior when saline was substituted for nicotine than rats that initiated self-administration as adolescents. Reinstatement of nicotine seeking following nicotine priming injections (0.075, 0.15, 0.3 mg/kg, s.c.) was independent of the age of onset of nicotine self-administration. The present data from established rat models of drug self-administration and drug relapse suggest that nicotine is less reinforcing in adolescent compared with adult rats and that processes other than the reinforcing effects of nicotine may be involved in the greater susceptibility to smoking during the adolescent developmental stage.

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