Bilbao, Ainhoa
Blanco Calvo, Eduardo
Luque-Rojas, María Jesús
Suárez, Juan
Palomino, Ana
Vida, Margarita
Araos, Pedro
Bermúdez-Silva, Francisco J.
Fernández Espejo, Emilio
Spanagel, Rainer
Rodríguez de Fonseca, Fernando
2015-02-13T14:35:12Z
2025-01-01
2013-01-01
2015-02-13T14:35:13Z
Oleoylethanolamide (OEA) is an acylethanolamide that acts as an agonist of nuclear peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha (PPARa) to exert their biological functions, which include the regulation of appetite and metabolism. Increasing evidence also suggests that OEA may participate in the control of reward-related behaviours. However, direct experimental evidence for the role of the OEA-PPARa receptor interaction in drug-mediated behaviours, such as cocaine-induced behavioural phenotypes, is lacking. The present study explored the role of OEA and its receptor PPARa on the psychomotor and rewarding responsiveness to cocaine using behavioural tests indicative of core components of addiction. We found that acute administration of OEA (1, 5 or 20?mg/kg, i.p.) reduced spontaneous locomotor activity and attenuated psychomotor activation induced by cocaine (20?mg/kg) in C57Bl/6 mice. However, PPARa receptor knockout mice showed normal sensitization, although OEA was capable of reducing behavioural sensitization with fewer efficacies. Furthermore, conditioned place preference and reinstatement to cocaine were intact in these mice. Our results indicate that PPARa receptor does not play a critical, if any, role in mediating short- and long-term psychomotor and rewarding responsiveness to cocaine. However, further research is needed for the identification of the targets of OEA for its inhibitory action on cocaine-mediated responses.
English
Cocaine; Knockout; Motor sensitization; Oleoylethanolamide; PPARa; Cocaïna; Cocaine
John Wiley & Sons
Reproducció del document publicat a : https://doi.org/10.1111/adb.12006
Addiction Biology, 2013, vol. 18, núm. 1, p. 78-87
(c)The Authors, John Wiley & Sons, 2013
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