Individual differences in addiction-like behaviors and choice between cocaine versus food in Heterogeneous Stock rats
Biological Psychology
150
Intoxication
Individuality
Addiction
Self Administration
Basic Behavioral and Social Science
Medical and Health Sciences
Preference
Substance Misuse
Cocaine-Related Disorders
03 medical and health sciences
Discrete choice
0302 clinical medicine
Cocaine
Reward
616
Behavioral and Social Science
Psychology
Addictive
Animals
Psychiatry
2. Zero hunger
Behavior
Psychology and Cognitive Sciences
Neurosciences
Natural reward
Self-administration
Brain Disorders
Rats
Behavior, Addictive
Good Health and Well Being
5.1 Pharmaceuticals
Individual differences
Women's Health
Biological psychology
Drug Abuse (NIDA only)
DOI:
10.1007/s00213-021-05961-1
Publication Date:
2021-08-20T06:03:58Z
AUTHORS (6)
ABSTRACT
AbstractRationale and objectivesRecent studies reported that when given a mutually exclusive choice between cocaine and palatable food, most rats prefer the non-drug reward over cocaine. However, these studies used rat strains with limited genetic and behavioral diversity. Here, we used a unique outbred strain of rats (Heterogeneous Stock, HS) that mimic the genetic variability of humans.MethodsWe first identified individual differences in addiction-like behaviors (low and high). Next, we tested choice between cocaine and palatable food using a discrete choice procedure. We characterized the individual differences using an Addiction score that incorporates key features of addiction: escalated intake, highly motivated responding (progressive ratio), and responding despite adverse consequences (footshock punishment). We assessed food vs. cocaine choice at different drug-free days (without pre-trial cocaine self administration) during acquisition of cocaine self-administration or after escalation of cocaine self-administration. We also assessed drug vs. food choice immediately after 1-, 2-, or 6-h cocaine self-administration.ResultsIndependent of the addiction score, without pre-trial coccaine (1 or more abstinence days) HS rats strongly preferred the palatable food over cocaine, even if the food reward was delayed or its size was reduced. However, rats with high but not low addiction score modestly increased cocaine choice immediately after 1-, 2- or 6-h cocaine self-administration.ConclusionsLike other strains, HS rats strongly prefer palatable food over cocaine. Individual differences in addiction score were associated with increased drug choice in the presence but not absence (abstinence) of cocaine. The HS strain may be useful in studies on mechanisms of addiction vulnerability.
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