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Involving the cerebellum in cocaine‐induced memory: pattern of c F os expression in mice trained to acquire conditioned preference for cocaine
Author(s) -
CarboGas María,
VazquezSanroman Dolores,
AguirreManzo Luisa,
CoriaAvila Genaro A.,
Manzo Jorge,
SanchisSegura Carla,
Miquel Marta
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
addiction biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.445
H-Index - 78
eISSN - 1369-1600
pISSN - 1355-6215
DOI - 10.1111/adb.12042
Subject(s) - neuroscience , cerebellum , conditioned place preference , psychology , prefrontal cortex , stimulus (psychology) , granule cell , cerebellar vermis , addiction , central nervous system , cognition , cognitive psychology , dentate gyrus
Because of its primary role in drug‐seeking, consumption and addictive behaviour, there is a growing interest in identifying the neural circuits and molecular mechanisms underlying the formation, maintenance and retrieval of drug‐related memories. Human studies, which focused on neuronal systems that store and control drug‐conditioned memories, have found cerebellar activations during the retrieval of drug‐associated cue memory. However, at the pre‐clinical level, almost no attention has been paid to a possible role of the cerebellum in drug‐related memories. In the present study, we ought to fill this gap by aiming to investigate the pattern of neuronal activation (as revealed by c F os expression) in different regions of the prefrontal cortex and cerebellum of mice trained to develop conditioned preference for an olfactory stimulus ( CS +) paired with cocaine. Our results indicate that CS + preference was directly associated with cFos expression in cells at the apical region of the granule cell layer of the cerebellar vermis; this relationship being more prominent in some specific lobules. Conversely, c F os+ immunostaining in other cerebellar regions seems to be unrelated to CS + preference but to other aspects of the conditioning procedure. At the prefrontal cortex, c F os expression seemed to be related to cocaine administration rather than to its ability to establish conditioned preference. The present results suggest that as it has been observed in some clinical studies, the cerebellum might be an important and largely overlooked part of the neural circuits involved in generating, maintaining and/or retrieving drug memories.