학술논문

Caveolin-1 Expression in the Dorsal Striatum Drives Methamphetamine Addiction-Like Behavior
Document Type
article
Source
International Journal of Molecular Sciences. 22(15)
Subject
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Biological Sciences
Medicinal and Biomolecular Chemistry
Chemical Sciences
Microbiology
Drug Abuse (NIDA only)
Brain Disorders
Substance Misuse
Behavioral and Social Science
Neurosciences
Methamphetamine
Good Health and Well Being
Amphetamine-Related Disorders
Animals
Calcium-Calmodulin-Dependent Protein Kinase Type 2
Caveolin 1
Corpus Striatum
Long-Term Potentiation
Male
Rats
Rats
Long-Evans
Reward
self-administration
caveolin
long-term potentiation
dopamine D1 receptor
cannabinoid CB1 receptor
CaMKII
Other Chemical Sciences
Genetics
Other Biological Sciences
Chemical Physics
Biochemistry and cell biology
Medicinal and biomolecular chemistry
Language
Abstract
Dopamine D1 receptor (D1R) function is regulated by membrane/lipid raft-resident protein caveolin-1 (Cav1). We examined whether altered expression of Cav1 in the dorsal striatum would affect self-administration of methamphetamine, an indirect agonist at the D1Rs. A lentiviral construct expressing Cav1 (LV-Cav1) or containing a short hairpin RNA against Cav1 (LV-shCav1) was used to overexpress or knock down Cav1 expression respectively, in the dorsal striatum. Under a fixed-ratio schedule, LV-Cav1 enhanced and LV-shCav1 reduced responding for methamphetamine in an extended access paradigm compared to LV-GFP controls. LV-Cav1 and LV-shCav1 also produced an upward and downward shift in a dose-response paradigm, generating a drug vulnerable/resistant phenotype. LV-Cav1 and LV-shCav1 did not alter responding for sucrose. Under a progressive-ratio schedule, LV-shCav1 generally reduced positive-reinforcing effects of methamphetamine and sucrose as seen by reduced breakpoints. Western blotting confirmed enhanced Cav1 expression in LV-Cav1 rats and reduced Cav1 expression in LV-shCav1 rats. Electrophysiological findings in LV-GFP rats demonstrated an absence of high-frequency stimulation (HFS)-induced long-term potentiation (LTP) in the dorsal striatum after extended access methamphetamine self-administration, indicating methamphetamine-induced occlusion of plasticity. LV-Cav1 prevented methamphetamine-induced plasticity via increasing phosphorylation of calcium calmodulin kinase II, suggesting a mechanism for addiction vulnerability. LV-shCav1 produced a marked deficit in the ability of HFS to produce LTP and, therefore, extended access methamphetamine was unable to alter striatal plasticity, indicating a mechanism for resistance to addiction-like behavior. Our results demonstrate that Cav1 expression and knockdown driven striatal plasticity assist with modulating addiction to drug and nondrug rewards, and inspire new strategies to reduce psychostimulant addiction.