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  • Sex, stress, and prefrontal cortex: influence of biological sex on stress-promoted cocaine seeking.

Sex, stress, and prefrontal cortex: influence of biological sex on stress-promoted cocaine seeking.

Neuropsychopharmacology : official publication of the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology (2020-04-18)
Elizabeth M Doncheck, Gage T Liddiard, Chaz D Konrath, Xiaojie Liu, Laikang Yu, Luke A Urbanik, Matthew R Herbst, Margot C DeBaker, Nicholas Raddatz, Erik C Van Newenhizen, Jacob Mathy, Marieke R Gilmartin, Qing-Song Liu, Cecilia J Hillard, John R Mantsch
摘要

Clinical reports suggest that females diagnosed with substance use disorder experience enhanced relapse vulnerability compared with males, particularly during stress. We previously demonstrated that a stressor (footshock) can potentiate cocaine seeking in male rats via glucocorticoid-dependent cannabinoid type-1 receptor (CB1R)-mediated actions in the prelimbic prefrontal cortex (PrL-PFC). Here, we investigated the influence of biological sex on stress-potentiated cocaine seeking. Despite comparable self-administration and extinction, females displayed a lower threshold for cocaine-primed reinstatement than males. Unlike males, footshock, tested across a range of intensities, failed to potentiate cocaine-primed reinstatement in females. However, restraint potentiated reinstatement in both sexes. While sex differences in stressor-induced plasma corticosterone (CORT) elevations and defensive behaviors were not observed, differences were evident in footshock-elicited ultrasonic vocalizations. CORT administration, at a dose which recapitulates stressor-induced plasma levels, reproduced stress-potentiated cocaine-primed reinstatement in both sexes. In females, CORT effects varied across the estrous cycle; CORT-potentiated reinstatement was only observed during diestrus and proestrus. As in males, CORT-potentiated cocaine seeking in females was localized to the PrL-PFC and both CORT- and restraint-potentiated cocaine seeking required PrL-PFC CB1R activation. In addition, ex vivo whole-cell electrophysiological recordings from female layer V PrL-PFC pyramidal neurons revealed CB1R-dependent CORT-induced suppression of inhibitory synaptic activity, as previously observed in males. These findings demonstrate that, while stress potentiates cocaine seeking via PrL-PFC CB1R in both sexes, sensitivity to cocaine priming injections is greater in females, CORT-potentiating effects vary with the estrous cycle, and whether reactivity to specific stressors may manifest as drug seeking depends on biological sex.

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Sigma-Aldrich
CNQX, ≥98% (HPLC), solid
Sigma-Aldrich
AM251, >98% (HPLC), solid