Restricția alimentară determină încorporarea sinaptică a receptorilor AMPA permeabili la calciu în Nucleus Accumbens (2017)

Eur J Neurosci. 2017 Jan 23. doi: 10.1111/ejn.13528.

Ouyang J1, Carcea I2,3,4, Schiavo JK2,3,4, Jones KT1, Rabinowitsch A1, Kolaric R1, de Vaca SC1, Froemke RC, Carr KD1,5.

Abstract

Chronic food restriction potentiates behavioral and cellular responses to drugs of abuse and D-1 dopamine receptor agonists administered systemically or locally in the nucleus accumbens (NAc). However, the alterations in NAc synaptic transmission underlying these effects are incompletely understood. AMPA receptor trafficking is a major mechanism for regulating synaptic strength, and previous studies have shown that both sucrose and d-amphetamine rapidly alter the abundance of AMPA receptor subunits in the NAc postsynaptic density (PSD) in a manner that differs between food-restricted and ad libitum fed rats. The present study examined whether food restriction, in the absence of reward stimulus challenge, alters AMPAR subunit abundance in the NAc PSD. Food restriction was found to increase surface expression and, specifically, PSD abundance, of GluA1 but not GluA2, suggesting synaptic incorporation of GluA2-lacking Ca2+-permeable AMPARs (CP-AMPARs). Naspm, an antagonist of CP-AMPARs, decreased the amplitude of evoked EPSCs in Nac shell, and blocked the enhanced locomotor response to local microinjection of the D-1 receptor agonist, SKF-82958, in food-restricted, but not ad libitum fed, subjects. Although microinjection of the D-2 receptor agonist, quinpirole, also induced greater locomotor activation in food-restricted than ad libitum fed rats, this effect was not decreased by Naspm. Taken together, the present findings are consistent with synaptic incorporation of CP-AMPARs in D-1 receptor expressing medium spiny neurons in NAc as a mechanistic underpinning of the enhanced responsiveness of food-restricted rats to natural rewards and drugs of abuse.

CUVINTE CHEIE: Addiction; Dieting; Neuroplasticity; Reward

PMID: 28112453

DOI: 10.1111 / ejn.13528