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Enhanced anxiety in the male offspring of sires that self‐administered cocaine
Author(s) -
White Samantha L.,
Vassoler Fair M.,
Schmidt Heath D.,
Pierce R. Christopher,
Wimmer Mathieu E.
Publication year - 2016
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.12258
Subject(s) - offspring , anxiogenic , anxiety , psychology , prenatal cocaine exposure , sire , hypophagia , elevated plus maze , self administration , endocrinology , medicine , developmental psychology , pregnancy , psychiatry , anxiolytic , biology , neuroscience , prenatal exposure , zoology , genetics , hypothalamus
We previously showed that paternal cocaine exposure reduced the reinforcing efficacy of cocaine in male offspring. Here, we sought to determine whether paternal cocaine experience could also influence anxiety levels in offspring. Male rats were allowed to self‐administer cocaine (controls received saline passively) for 60 days and then were bred with naïve females. Measures of anxiety and cocaine‐induced anxiogenic effects were assessed in the adult offspring. Cocaine‐sired male offspring exhibited increased anxiety‐like behaviors, as measured using the novelty‐induced hypophagia and defensive burying tasks, relative to saline‐sired males. In contrast, sire cocaine experience had no effect on anxiety‐like behaviors in female offspring. When challenged with an anxiogenic (but not anorectic) dose of cocaine (2.5 mg/kg, i.p.), anxiety‐like behavior was enhanced in all animals to an equal degree regardless of sire drug experience. Since anxiety and depression are often co‐morbid, we also assessed measures of depressive‐like behavior. Sire cocaine experience had no effect on depression‐like behaviors, as measured by the forced swim task, among male offspring. In a separate group of naïve littermates, select neuronal correlates of anxiety were measured. Male offspring of cocaine‐experienced sires showed increased mRNA and protein expression of corticotropin‐releasing factor receptor 2 in the hippocampus. Together, these results indicate that cocaine‐experienced sires produce male progeny that have increased baseline anxiety, which is unaltered by subsequent cocaine exposure.

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