• Psychopharmacology · Jan 2013

    Tolerance and sensitization to chronic escalating dose heroin following extended withdrawal in Fischer rats: possible role of mu-opioid receptors.

    • Katharine M Seip-Cammack, Brian Reed, Yong Zhang, Ann Ho, and Mary Jeanne Kreek.
    • Laboratory of the Biology of Addictive Diseases, The Rockefeller University, 1230 York Avenue, New York, NY 10065, USA. kseip@rockefeller.edu
    • Psychopharmacology (Berl.). 2013 Jan 1; 225 (1): 127-40.

    Rationale/ObjectivesHeroin addiction is characterized by recurrent cycles of drug use, abstinence, and relapse. It is likely that neurobiological changes during chronic heroin exposure persist across withdrawal and impact behavioral responses to re-exposure. We hypothesized that, after extended withdrawal, heroin-withdrawn rats would express behavioral tolerance and/or sensitization in response to heroin re-exposure and that these responses might be associated with altered mu-opioid receptor (MOPr) activity.MethodsMale Fischer rats were exposed chronically to escalating doses of heroin (7.5-75 mg/kg/day), experienced acute spontaneous withdrawal and extended (10-day) abstinence, and were re-exposed chronically to heroin. Homecage behaviors and locomotor activity in response to heroin, as well as somatic withdrawal signs, were recorded. Separate groups of rats were sacrificed after extended abstinence and MOPr expression and G-protein coupling were analyzed using [(3)H]DAMGO and [(35)S]GTPγS assays.ResultsThe depth of behavioral stupor was lower during the initial days of heroin re-exposure compared to the initial days of the first exposure period. Behavioral responses (e.g., stereotypy) and locomotion were elevated in response to heroin re-exposure at low doses. Rats conditioned for heroin place preference during the chronic re-exposure period expressed heroin preference during acute withdrawal; this preference was stronger than rats conditioned during chronic heroin exposure that followed chronic saline and injection-free periods. Extended withdrawal was associated with increased MOPr expression in the caudate-putamen and frontal and cingulate cortices. No changes in G-protein coupling were identified.ConclusionsAspects of tolerance/sensitization to heroin are present even after extended abstinence and may be associated with altered MOPr density.

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