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Vol. 285, Issue 1, 277-284, April 1998
Psychobiology Section, National Institute on Drug Abuse, Intramural Research Program, National Institutes of Health, Baltimore, Maryland
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Abstract |
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Chronic cocaine administration can produce tolerance or sensitization to locomotor activating effects, depending on the treatment paradigm. The effects of chronic, continuous cocaine were measured on locomotor activity for 1 hr daily for 7 days. Cocaine produced significant increases in locomotor activity 4 hr after osmotic minipumps were implanted, and an even higher level of activity after 24 hr. This was likely a rapid sensitization to the locomotor activating effects of cocaine, because neither brain nor plasma levels of cocaine were significantly altered over the treatment period. By day 4, activity levels diminished, but remained significantly higher than in saline-treated animals. Twenty-four hr after pump removal, there were no changes in dopamine D1 or D2 receptor binding, or in dopamine-stimulation of adenylyl cyclase activity in either caudate putamen or nucleus accumbens of cocaine-treated animals. Chronic naltrexone produced a slight, nonsignificant decrease in locomotor activity and when combined with cocaine, produced the same pattern of activity as cocaine alone, but with slightly less stimulation on all days. Morphine produced a smaller increase in activity than cocaine that remained constant throughout the treatment week. Cocaine with morphine was additive, producing greater activity and less tolerance than cocaine alone. Thus, continuous cocaine administration produces a rapid sensitization that is lost over the course of the treatment period, yet does not produce any immediate alterations in dopamine receptors or regulation of adenylyl cyclase. The pattern of behavior is not altered by an opioid antagonist, while the sensitization period appears to be prolonged in the presence of an opioid agonist.
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Introduction |
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Chronic
administration of cocaine has been shown to produce either tolerance or
sensitization (also called reverse tolerance) to locomotor activating
effects, depending on the paradigm by which cocaine is administered. In
general, intermittent injections of cocaine produce sensitization while
continuous infusion leads to tolerance (Post and Rose, 1976
; Reith
et al., 1987
; Inada et al., 1992
; King et
al., 1994
). Similarly, chronic cocaine treatment has produced
variable results on neurochemical measures (e.g., Reith
et al., 1987
; Pettit et al., 1990
; Pilotte
et al., 1991
; Zeigler et al., 1991
; Baumann
et al., 1993
). We have previously shown that there are
differential changes in dopamine transporter function in the nucleus
accumbens and caudate putamen after 7 days of chronic continuous
cocaine administration (Izenwasser and Cox, 1992
), and that these
changes are different from those produced by daily cocaine injections
(Izenwasser and Cox, 1990
). In those studies, we found that the curve
for the inhibition of dopamine uptake by cocaine was shifted to the
left after continuous administration, and to the right after
intermittent injections. In neither of these conditions, however, was
the density of dopamine transporters altered (Izenwasser and Cox, 1990
;
Izenwasser and Cox, 1992
).
Similarly, there are conflicting reports of changes in dopamine
D1 receptors, with increases in receptor number
observed immediately after 15 days of intermittent treatment, followed
by decreases 14 days later (Kleven et al., 1990
); and no
changes seen 7 days after a 6-day treatment period (Mayfield et
al., 1992
) or 1 day after 8 days of cocaine injections (Peris
et al., 1990
). Functional studies also produced variable
results, with no change in dopamine D1 receptor
regulation of adenylyl cyclase activity reported in caudate putamen or
nucleus accumbens after withdrawal from 6 days of injections (Mayfield
et al., 1992
); but an increased inhibition of cell firing by
D1 agonists after 2 wk of cocaine treatment, a
sensitization that persisted for at least 1 mo after cessation of
treatment (Henry and White, 1991
). These studies have differed from one
another in the length of treatment, doses of cocaine administered, and
time since the last drug administration when the neurochemical assays
have been done, suggesting that these factors might play an important
role in determining the behavioral and neurochemical consequences of
chronic cocaine administration. In none of these studies has the effect
of continuous cocaine administration been examined on dopamine
receptors.
There is evidence that opioid receptors may play a role in mediating
the behavioral effects of cocaine. The reinforcing effects of cocaine,
as evidenced by a lowering of threshold for brain-stimulation reward,
are blocked by the opioid antagonist naloxone (Bain and Kornetsky,
1987
). In addition, self-administration of cocaine is decreased
following administration of opioid antagonists (Mello et
al., 1990
; Corrigall and Coen, 1991
). Conversely, chronic cocaine treatment has been shown to produce changes in opioid receptor number
(Hammer, 1989
; Unterwald et al., 1992
, 1994
) and function (Unterwald et al., 1993
; Izenwasser, 1994
; Izenwasser
et al., 1996
). Taken together, these findings suggest that
the dopaminergic and opioidergic systems may interact in the production
of the behavioral effects of cocaine.
Although there have been many studies aimed at understanding the sensitizing effects of cocaine, there is not much information on the tolerance produced by chronic, continuous infusion of cocaine. Studies such as these may help us to understand which neurochemical systems are involved in the production of cocaine's behavioral effects. Additionally, an understanding of the mechanisms involved in producing tolerance to cocaine may help in the development of a treatment for cocaine addiction. If tolerance is produced to a sufficient level, it is possible that the drug would no longer be reinforcing, thus eliminating the self-administration of it. Our studies were aimed at investigating the effects of continuous cocaine on locomotor activity and dopamine D1 and D2 receptors, as well as the interactions of cocaine with the opioid agonist morphine, and the opioid antagonist naltrexone on locomotor activity. These results will provide information on 1) the behavioral effects of chronic, continuous cocaine administration, 2) the roles that opioid actions play in mediating the locomotor activating effects of chronic cocaine, 3) the behavioral effects of a combination of cocaine and an opioid agonist, a commonly used drug combination (often referred to as a speedball), as well as a potential modulation of cocaine-induced tolerance by opioid receptors and 4) the effects of chronic, continuous cocaine administration on dopamine D1 and D2 receptors.
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Methods |
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Chemicals
Chemicals and reagents were obtained from the following sources: [3H] SCH 23390 (specific activity 81.4 Ci/mmol), [3H] sulpiride (specific activity 85.6 Ci/mmol) and [3H]cAMP (ammonium salt; specific activity 31.4 Ci/mmol) from New England Nuclear (Boston, MA); adenosine triphosphate, guanosine triphosphate, cAMP, theophylline, EGTA, dopamine, and cocaine hydrochloride from Sigma Chemical Co. (St. Louis, MO); naltrexone and (+)SCH 23390 from Research Biochemicals Int. (Natick, MA) and morphine from the National Institute on Drug Abuse (Rockville, MD).
Treatments
Male Sprague-Dawley rats (200-250 g, Taconic, Germantown, NY)
were kept on a 12-hr light/dark cycle (lights on at 7:00
A.M.) with food and water available ad libitum.
Animals were anesthetized with halothane and Alzet osmotic minipumps
model 2001 (Alza Corp., Palo Alto, CA) delivering approximately 1 µl/hr for 7 days were implanted s.c. between the scapulae. The pumps
contained either saline (0.9% sodium chloride; 24 µl/day), or a
concentration of drug resulting in delivery of approximately 15, 30 or
50 mg/kg/day of cocaine, expressed as free base, or 5.6 mg/kg/day
naltrexone hydrochloride, a dose known to up-regulate
mu-opioid receptors (Tempel et al., 1985
). The
highest dose of cocaine tested under these conditions has been shown to
produce no observable detrimental effects to the animals
(i.e., there is no evidence of necrotic skin or subcutaneous
lesions) (Izenwasser and Cox, 1992
; Izenwasser, 1994
). To get morphine
into solution for delivery of approximately 15 mg/kg/day morphine
sulfate, minipumps that delivered 10 µl/hr (model 2010) were used.
Comparable results were observed when saline was administered using
either the small or the large pumps, and small pumps were predominantly
used throughout these studies. The minipumps were filled and soaked
overnight in saline at 37°C before surgery to reach a constant
pumping volume before being implanted into the animals. The dose of
drug delivered was determined by the pumping rate and average body
weight of the animals in each individual experiment, which was
comprised of at least four rats in each treatment group.
Locomotor Activity
Locomotor activity was measured for 1 hr each day starting 4 hr after pump implantation and again every 24 hr for 7 days. Acrylic chambers (16 inches by 16 inches) were placed inside Digiscan activity monitors (Omnitech Electronics, Columbus, OH) that were equipped with infrared light sensitive detectors mounted 2.5 cm apart along two perpendicular walls. Mounted along the opposing walls were infrared light beams that were directed at the detectors. One count of horizontal activity was registered each time the subject interrupted two successive beams. Repetitive interruptions of the same beam due to behaviors such as grooming or head bobbing were not counted as part of horizontal activity, but were counted as stereotypy. A two-way analysis of variance (Condition x Day) was used to determine the effects of chronic drug administration on locomotor activity. Fisher's Protected LSD was used for post-hoc testing.
Brain and Plasma Levels of Cocaine
Pumps were implanted as above (the dose of cocaine in this study was 50 mg/kg/day) into a separate group of animals and on each of the 7 days, five rats were killed by decapitation at the same time of day as the locomotor activity testing would have taken place. Brain tissue (whole brain minus cerebellum) was homogenized in saline, and trunk blood was collected and spun down and the brain and plasma samples were assayed for cocaine and metabolites. These data were provided by American Medical Laboratories (Chantilly, VA). Data were analyzed using analysis of variance followed by Fisher's protected LSD for post hoc testing.
Receptor Binding
Dopamine D1 receptor binding. Seven days after minipump implantation, the rats were anesthetized and the pumps were removed. Twenty-four hr later the rats were killed by decapitation, the brains were rapidly removed and the caudate putamen and/or nucleus accumbens were dissected on ice. The tissues were suspended in ice-cold buffer (50 mM Tris HCl, pH 7.4) homogenized for 10 sec with a polytron (setting 7), and centrifuged at 35,000 × g for 10 min at 4°C. The pellets were resuspended in Tris buffer and recentrifuged. This was repeated, and the final pellet was resuspended in 3.75 mg/ml of binding buffer (50 mM Tris, 120 mM NaCl, 5 mM CaCl2, 1 mM MgCl2, pH 7.4 and 1 µM mianserin to block binding to serotonin receptors). This equals approximately 3 mg of tissue per assay tube.
Fresh tissue homogenate was used in all experiments. [3H]SCH 23390 (final concentration .3 nM) was used to determine binding to dopamine D1 receptors, as previously described (Shah et al., 1995Dopamine D2 receptor binding. Binding of [3H]sulpiride to dopamine D2-like receptors was essentially as described above for D1 receptors with the following differences. Binding was done in a buffer containing 50 mM Tris HCl, 100 mM NaCl and 0.01% ascorbic acid, at pH 7.5. Nonspecific binding was determined as binding in the presence of 10 µM sulpiride. Nonspecific binding to filters was reduced by pre-soaking them in 0.3% polyethyleneimine/water. The incubation was for 60 min at room temperature.
Data analysis.
Saturation data were analyzed by the use of
the nonlinear least squares curve-fitting computer program LIGAND
(Munson and Rodbard, 1980
). Data from replicate experiments were
modeled together to produce a set of parameter estimates
(Kd and Bmax values)
and the associated S.E. of these estimates. Fits were compared using analysis of variance and a difference was considered significant only
if the P values were less than or equal to .05. Protein values were
determined using a modification of the Lowry procedure (Peterson, 1977
).
Adenylyl Cyclase Assays
Seven days after minipump implantation, the pumps were removed.
Twenty-four hr later the rats were killed by decapitation, the brains
were rapidly removed and the caudate putamen and nucleus accumbens were
dissected on ice and membranes were prepared and adenylyl cyclase
activity assayed as described previously (Izenwasser and Katz, 1993
).
Crude membrane preparations were made by homogenizing the tissues in a
teflon/glass homogenizer. The tissues were suspended in 25 ml of buffer
(10 mM imidazole, 2 mM EGTA; pH 7.4) and centrifuged at 15,000 × g for 15 min at 4°C. The pellets were resuspended in 25 ml
of fresh buffer and centrifuged again for 15 min. The supernatants were
discarded and the pellets were homogenized in 40 volumes of ice-cold
buffer containing 10% glycerol and frozen at -70°C until assay.
When assayed, tissue homogenate (10 µl) was added on ice to assay
tubes (final volume 0.06 ml) containing 10 mM imidazole (pH 7.4), 10 mM
theophylline, 6 mM MgSO4, 0.6 mM EGTA, 1.5 mM ATP, 0.01 mM GTP and either the drug being tested or water. Triplicate samples of membrane suspension were incubated at 30°C for 5 min in
the presence or absence of dopamine or water, as appropriate. Adenylyl
cyclase activity was terminated by placing the tubes into boiling water
for 2 min. The amount of cAMP formed was determined by a
[3H]cAMP protein binding assay (Brown et
al., 1971
). Briefly, [3H]cAMP was added to
each test tube followed by a binding protein prepared from bovine
adrenal glands. The samples were incubated on ice for 90 min and the
assay was terminated by the addition of charcoal and centrifugation to
separate the free cAMP from that which was bound to the binding
protein. Aliquots from the supernatant were placed into scintillation
vials to which three ml of Beckman Ready Value Scintillation Cocktail
were added and radioactivity was determined by liquid scintillation
spectrometry. Protein values were determined using a modification of
the Lowry procedure (Peterson, 1977
). The amount of cAMP formed as a
function of concentration of agonist was analyzed using analysis of
variance and linear regression techniques (Snedecor and Cochran, 1967
).
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Results |
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Locomotor activity.
Cocaine (15, 30 and 50 mg/kg/day) produced
a significant increase in locomotor activity as compared to saline
(F(3,234) = 25, P
.0001, fig.
1A). Post hoc analyses showed
that the effect of each dose of cocaine on locomotor activity was
significantly different from that of saline (P
.0001). In
addition, the effect of the doses across days were significantly
different (P
.0001), such that the magnitudes of the increases
in behavior were dose-related, with higher doses of cocaine producing
greater increases in activity than lower doses. Four hr after pumps
were implanted, the animals receiving the two higher doses of cocaine
exhibited significantly greater amounts of horizontal activity than the
animals receiving saline infusions (P
.0001). Maximal activity
with cocaine was observed 24 hr later, with decreases in this
activation observed over the next several days, after which the level
of activity reached a plateau that was still significantly higher than
control activity (fig. 1A). During this period, post hoc
analyses showed that for each dose of cocaine the activity level on
each successive day was not significantly different than on the day
immediately preceding it. In addition, activity on the first day of the
plateau was not significantly different from that observed on day
seven. The locomotor activity reached a plateau by day three in the
animals treated with the two lower doses of cocaine, and by day 4 in
the group receiving the highest dose (50 mg/kg/day). During this
plateau phase, activity levels never decreased below the level observed on the first test day. When stereotypy was measured, a similar pattern
of activity was seen, with an increase in activity on day 1, followed
by an even greater effect on day 2 and a decrease to a plateau still
significantly higher than control activity (fig. 1B).
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.0001) that remained constant over the entire week (fig. 2A). The
combination of cocaine (50 mg/kg/day) and morphine (15 mg/kg/day)
produced levels of activity significantly greater than either morphine (F(1,272) = 208, P
.0001) or cocaine
(F(1,308) = 43.0, P
.0001) alone.
Further, the amount of activity in the group receiving both cocaine and
morphine remained fairly constant by the second day of treatment
(i.e., the level of activity on each day was not
significantly different from the day immediately preceding it), and
there was no significant difference between activity levels on day 1 or
2 as compared to day seven, unlike the pattern that was seen in the
animals treated with cocaine alone (fig. 2A). During this time period, the
combination of the two drugs appears to produce a potentiated effect,
(i.e., an effect that is greater than what would be expected
if there was a merely additive effect of the two drugs alone).
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.14), although there was a slight decrease in activity on
most of the days, especially during the early part of the week. In
combination with cocaine (50 mg/kg/day), there was a slight but
significant decrease in activity, as compared to cocaine alone (fig.
2B; F(1,303) = 5.71, P
.02). It is not known whether this effect is additive (because naltrexone alone produced small decreases in activity) or whether naltrexone is in fact
attenuating the locomotor activating effects of cocaine. The pattern of
activity of cocaine was clearly not altered by naltrexone, and was the
same as that observed with cocaine alone (i.e., a large
increase between days 1 and 2, followed by a slow decrease by day 4 to
a level that remained constant for the rest of the treatment period).
Brain and plasma levels of cocaine.
Daily levels of cocaine
and its metabolites ecgonine methylester (EME) and benzoylecgonine (BE)
were determined in brain and plasma (table
1). Neither the levels of cocaine nor
benzoylecgonine varied significantly over the course of the study in
either the brain or the plasma during treatment with 50 mg/kg/day of
cocaine. There was a significant effect of day on ecgonine methylester in the brain F(6,28) = 3.22, P
.016. Post hoc analysis showed that the level of
ecgonine methylester on day 1 was significantly lower than that
measured on day 2 and on days 4 to 7.
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Dopamine receptor binding. Binding of [3H]SCH 23390 was not significantly changed in either the nucleus accumbens or caudate putamen of cocaine-treated (50 mg/kg/day), as compared to saline-treated animals, 24 hr after the pumps were removed (table 2). Neither the Kd nor the Bmax values for binding of this ligand changed after this treatment. Similarly, no significant changes were observed in [3H]sulpiride binding to D2-like dopamine receptors in either of these brain regions (table 3).
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Dopamine stimulation of adenylyl cyclase activity.
There were no changes in basal adenylyl cyclase activity in either nucleus accumbens or caudate putamen after any of the treatments. Dopamine (100 µM) stimulated adenylyl cyclase activity in both the caudate putamen (fig. 3A) and nucleus accumbens (fig. 3B) to approximately 200% of basal activity. The amount of stimulation at 100 µM dopamine was not significantly changed in either brain region after 7 days of chronic infusion of 50 mg/kg/day cocaine (fig. 3, A and B). Because there is not a true plateau at 100 µM it is not possible to definitively say that the maximal stimulation of cyclase activity by dopamine is unchanged, however, over the range of concentrations tested, there were no significant alterations as compared to tissue from saline-treated animals. Similarly, treatment with either morphine (15 mg/kg/day) or naltrexone (5.6 mg/kg/day), alone or in combination with cocaine (50 mg/kg/day), had no effect on dopamine-stimulated adenylyl cyclase activity, as compared to saline treatment (data not shown).
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Discussion |
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When cocaine is administered continuously via s.c. implanted osmotic minipumps, there is a significant increase in locomotor activity within 4 hr after treatment begins. Twenty-four hr later, activity levels are even higher, followed by an apparent tolerance to this elevated effect that develops over the course of several days, as animals return to their original level of activity as seen on day 1. These changes in activity levels are not due to differences in the amount of cocaine in either the plasma or the brain, because these do not change significantly over the course of the treatment period. In addition, this pattern of behavior does not appear to be dose-related, as the same pattern was observed with several different doses of the drug.
The increase in activity from day 1 to day 2 is interesting in that
this is not due to an increase in the brain cocaine level. By
definition, an increased response to the same dose of a drug is
sensitization. This suggests that there might be a fairly rapid development of sensitization to the behavioral effects of cocaine when
it is chronically administered, and that this sensitization is lost
over the next several days. This idea is further supported by the
finding that the amount of activity in the cocaine-treated animals
reaches a plateau at approximately the same level of activity that was
observed on day 1 of the treatment period. It is difficult to determine
whether the animals are truly tolerant to the initial effects of
cocaine, or to the sensitization produced by the chronic infusion of
cocaine, however, there is some evidence suggesting that the latter
might be true. Previously, it has been shown that mice treated with a
continuous infusion of cocaine exhibit increased locomotor activity as
compared to saline-treated animals, but that tolerance to this effect
develops after approximately 1 wk of drug administration (Reith
et al., 1987
). In addition, the same mice treated for 18 days with chronic cocaine infusions are tolerant to a challenge
injection of cocaine when tested 1 wk later as compared to mice
pretreated with saline. Under the current conditions, rats that
received injections with cocaine 2 days after the pumps are removed do
not appear to be tolerant to an injection of cocaine, as compared to
animals that had been treated with continuous saline via osmotic
minipump (French and Izenwasser, 1996
). However, if a challenge
injection of cocaine is given to rats 10 days after pump removal,
tolerance to the locomotor-activating effects has developed, as
compared to animals that had been previously treated with continuous
saline infusions (French and Izenwasser, 1996
). Thus, it does appear
that the development of tolerance might be related to an extended
withdrawal from the drug, as opposed to the drug itself. This
information, coupled with the finding that the brain level of cocaine
did not significantly change over the course of the treatment, suggests
that the large increase in behavior between day 1 and 2 of treatment is
likely a sensitized response (i.e., within the first 24 hr).
Further, this sensitization is what is lost over the course of the next
several days as the level of activity returns to its original
magnitude.
It is important to note that this does not suggest that this treatment
(i.e., continuous infusion of cocaine) is fundamentally equal to an intermittent injection regimen. Sensitization occurs during
the course of repeated injections and lasts for a long period of time,
whether or not the injections continue to be administered, with no
evidence of tolerance even after an extended withdrawal period (Post
and Rose, 1976
; Kalivas et al., 1988
; Peris and Zahniser, 1989
; Keller et al., 1992
).
Neither the brain nor plasma levels of cocaine changed significantly
over the 7-day treatment period, suggesting that any differences in
behavior were not due to an increased or decreased bioavailability of
the drug. Similarly, it has been shown that the brain level of cocaine
is not altered after a challenge injection 1 wk after continuous
cocaine infusion ends (Reith et al., 1987
), or after
repeated intraventricular administration of cocaine, a paradigm that
produces behavioral sensitization (Orona et al., 1994
).
These findings are in contrast to other studies showing that increased
cocaine levels are present in brain in response to an intraperitoneal
(Pettit et al., 1990
; Cass and Zahniser, 1993
) but not an
intraventricular (Pan et al., 1991
; Pettit and Pettit, 1994
)
injection of cocaine that follows a regimen of repeated i.p. cocaine
administration. Together these results suggest that increased cocaine
is seen in brain only after repeated i.p. injections, suggesting that
this may be due to alterations in the distribution of the drug from the
injection site, as opposed to a greater entry into the brain. These
differences do not appear to be related to the dosing paradigm
(i.e., intermittent vs. continuous
administration), because intermittent i.p. injections produce a
different effect than i.v. injections (Pan and Mojaverian, 1991
), but
is more likely due to the fact that during the continuous infusion, the
drug is administered s.c..
If the marked changes in locomotor activity are not due to alterations
in cocaine bioavailability, this suggests that the level of
sensitization is related to differences in the effect of cocaine after
it enters the brain. This is not likely due to an increase or decrease
in drug metabolism, because levels of two of the major metabolites of
cocaine, benzoylecgonine and ecgonine methyl ester, did not vary
considerably over the course of the treatment. Only the level of
ecgonine methyl ester in the brain varied significantly over the course
of the treatment period, such that the level on day 1 was significantly
lower than that observed over most of the rest of the treatment period.
However, ecgonine methyl ester has been shown to have no observable
stimulatory effects (Misra et al., 1975
). In fact, at
extremely high levels (300-800 µg), it produced sedation (Schuelke
et al., 1995
). The level of this metabolite does not
correlate with the behavioral effects that were observed, in that the
lowest level of EME was observed on day 1, with a significant increase
by day 2. Because, the level of activity observed on day 2 was
significantly higher than that seen on day 1, it is unlikely that a
sedative effect of ecgonine methyl ester is regulating this behavior.
The level of benzoylecgonine did not vary significantly over the course of the week in either the brain or in plasma. Both cocaine and this
metabolite produce increases in locomotor activity (Misra et
al., 1975
; Schuelke et al., 1995
) but the lack of
significant changes in brain levels cannot account for the variable
activity levels measured over the course of the treatment period.
Unlike the pattern of behavior seen with cocaine, the stimulation of
locomotor activity produced by morphine remained constant over the
course of the week. Morphine, at a dose that produces tolerance to
analgesia (Izenwasser, 1994
) produced a significant increase in
locomotor activity, to which neither tolerance nor sensitization
occurred. When cocaine and morphine were chronically coadministered,
activity levels were greater than those seen with either drug alone,
and did not significantly change over the course of the week. It
appears that morphine extends the period of sensitization to cocaine,
whereas naltrexone has no effect on this pattern of behavior. This
interaction between cocaine and morphine (i.e., a
potentiated effect when the two drugs are coadministered) is similar to
some reports of the reinforcing effects of stimulants and opioids. For
example, administration of a stimulant with morphine produces greater
reinforcement than does either drug alone, as measured using either the
brain-stimulation (Hubner et al., 1987
; Izenwasser and
Kornetsky, 1989
) or place preference (Masukawa et al., 1993
)
model of drug reinforcement. In rhesus monkeys, however, although a
combination of heroin and cocaine is self-administered, there does not
appear to be a potentiated effect at all doses tested (Mello et
al., 1995
). In animals trained to discriminate cocaine from
saline, although opioid agonists alone do not consistently substitute
for cocaine (Dykstra et al., 1992
; Spealman and Bergman, 1992
; Mello et al., 1995
), they do appear to potentiate its
discriminative stimulus effects (Spealman and Bergman, 1992
; Mello
et al., 1995
; Suzuki et al., 1995
; but see also
Dykstra et al., 1992
).
Although the administration of naltrexone alone did not produce a
significant alteration in locomotor activity, there was a small
decrease on most days, especially during the first half of the week.
When naltrexone was administered with cocaine, slightly less locomotor
activation was observed on each day of the treatment period as compared
to cocaine alone. It is not known whether this is merely an additive
effect of the two drugs, or whether in fact naltrexone did slightly
attenuate this behavioral effect of cocaine. This is in contrast to an
almost complete loss of activation when naltrexone is coadministered
with cocaine either acutely (Houdi et al., 1989
) or with
repeated single daily injections (Sala et al., 1995
). It is
not known why these findings are so discrepant. However, one big
difference in our study is that cocaine is continuously present with
this treatment paradigm, whereas with intermittent administration there
are extended periods of cocaine-free time between injections. Because
naltrexone has a much longer half-life than cocaine, it is present
during the cocaine-free periods between injections, making these two
paradigms similar in respect to the opioid antagonism. Thus, it is
possible that the blockade of cocaine's effects by naltrexone occurs
only if it is present in the absence of cocaine. This is supported by
our previous findings (Izenwasser, 1994
) that chronic coadministration
of cocaine with naltrexone produces a diminished opioid receptor
sensitization (suggesting a diminished action of naltrexone when
cocaine is present).
Twenty-four hr after cessation of the continuous infusion of cocaine
(50 mg/kg/day) there were no significant effects on dopamine D1-like or D2-like
receptors in either the caudate putamen or nucleus accumbens. Neither
the number or function of D1 receptors was
altered, and there were no changes in binding to dopamine D2 receptors. We have previously shown that there
is also no change in binding to the dopamine transporter after this
continuous cocaine treatment (Izenwasser and Cox, 1992
; Kunko et
al., 1997
). Thus, although cocaine produces marked behavioral
changes during the course of this treatment, there do not appear to be
significant changes in dopamine receptor binding or regulation of
adenylyl cyclase activity immediately after this chronic infusion.
Thus, these findings support the previously published studies
suggesting that cocaine does not have marked neurotoxic effects on the
dopaminergic system (Kleven et al., 1988
; Yeh and DeSouza,
1991
), and extend this conclusion to a continuous dosing regimen. In
addition, these data suggest that the changes in behavior that are seen
after chronic cocaine treatment might reflect changes in other systems, or perhaps differential interactions between systems.
In conclusion, these findings show that chronic continuous infusion of cocaine (50 mg/kg/day) for 7 days does not produce any immediate (within 24 hr) effects on dopamine D1 or D2 receptor binding or function in the caudate putamen or nucleus accumbens. In addition, the apparent tolerance that occurs during a chronic infusion of cocaine might actually be a rapidly developing sensitization and then loss thereof. This pattern of activity is not altered by an opioid antagonist, but is prolonged in the presence of morphine, the prototypical opioid agonist. It is not yet known whether animals treated with both cocaine and morphine will show tolerance after a withdrawal period, as do animals treated continuously with cocaine, but the findings do suggest that it is possible to alter the consequences of chronic cocaine via activation of opioid receptors. These findings further suggest that tolerance to the behavioral activating effects of cocaine may be due to changes that occur during withdrawal from a continuous treatment, as opposed to a direct effect of the drug during the treatment phase.
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Acknowledgments |
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The authors thank Richard Loeloff for expert technical assistance, Brett Heller for the binding assays and Marcia Little for surgical assistance. Thanks to Dr. Jonathan Katz for his support and editorial comments. The animals used in this study were maintained in facilities fully accredited by the American Association for the Accreditation of Laboratory Animal Care (AAALAC) and the studies were conducted in accordance with the guidelines of the Institutional Care and Use Committee of the Division of Intramural Research, National Institute on Drug Abuse, National Institutes of Health, and the Guide for Care and Use of Laboratory Animals, National Research Council, Department of Health, Education and Welfare, NIH Publication 85-23, revised 1985.
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Footnotes |
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Accepted for publication December 8, 1997.
Received for publication August 19, 1997.
1 This work was supported by the National Institute on Drug Abuse Intramural Research Program.
Send reprint requests to: Dr. Sari Izenwasser, Department of Neurology, Univ. of Miami Sch. of Med., 1501 NW 9th Avenue, Room 4061, Miami, FL 33136.
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Abbreviation |
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[3H] SCH 23390 (7-chloro-8-hydroxy-3-methyl-1-phenyl-2, 3,4,5-tetrahydro-1H-3-benzazepine). cAMP (Adenosine 3',5'cyclic phosphate.
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References |
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