This is a request for a MERIT extension of Grant R37 DA004294. Considerable progress has been made over the past grant period, resulting in the publication or submission of 42 papers, including 31 primary research papers. A detailed description of both published work and work in progress is provided. The focus over the past grant period has been on how the circumstances surrounding drug administration modulate both the behavioral and neurobiological actions of drugs of abuse, and their ability to induce forms of drug experience-dependent plasticity thought to be important in the transition to addition. We have shown, for example, that both the envionmental context in which drugs are experienced, and the rate at which drugs reach the brain, powerfully modulate acute drug effects, their ability to produce psychomotor sensitization, and the cells and circuits engaged by drugs (as indicated by the specific cells and circuits that show drug- induced immmediate early gene expression). Many of these studies have emphasized the phenomenon of psychomotor sensitization. However, it has been hypothesized that the transition to addiction is due in large part to the interaction of incentive sensitization, which leads to pathological incentive motivation for drugs, and persistent cognitive deficits in decision-making and judgment due to frontal cortical dysfunction. Thus, in the future we propose to focus on these two issues. In the past grant period we developed a procedure based on the propensity of animals to approach cues associated with rewards (sign tracking), and have applied it for the first time to the study of cocaine. This approach will allow us to characerize the conditions that lead to the attribution of incentive salience to drug-associated cues, and how this changes as a consequence of past drug experience (i.e., incentive sensitization). We have also developed a procedure that reveals, for the first time in an animal model, persistent cognitive deficits as a consequence of cocaine self-administration experience. Thus, we propose studies to explore the conditions under which past cocaine experience alters both incentive motivation for drug, and cognitive function. We believe this two-pronged approach will yield important new insights into the psychology and neurobiology of addiction.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
Type
Method to Extend Research in Time (MERIT) Award (R37)
Project #
5R37DA004294-22
Application #
7679126
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (NSS)
Program Officer
Volman, Susan
Project Start
1988-04-01
Project End
2011-07-31
Budget Start
2009-08-01
Budget End
2010-07-31
Support Year
22
Fiscal Year
2009
Total Cost
$359,308
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Michigan Ann Arbor
Department
Psychology
Type
Schools of Arts and Sciences
DUNS #
073133571
City
Ann Arbor
State
MI
Country
United States
Zip Code
48109
Morrow, Jonathan D; Saunders, Benjamin T; Maren, Stephen et al. (2015) Sign-tracking to an appetitive cue predicts incubation of conditioned fear in rats. Behav Brain Res 276:59-66
Robinson, Terry E; Yager, Lindsay M; Cogan, Elizabeth S et al. (2014) On the motivational properties of reward cues: Individual differences. Neuropharmacology 76 Pt B:450-9
Yager, Lindsay M; Robinson, Terry E (2013) A classically conditioned cocaine cue acquires greater control over motivated behavior in rats prone to attribute incentive salience to a food cue. Psychopharmacology (Berl) 226:217-28
Saunders, Benjamin T; Yager, Lindsay M; Robinson, Terry E (2013) Preclinical studies shed light on individual variation in addiction vulnerability. Neuropsychopharmacology 38:249-50
Saunders, Benjamin T; Robinson, Terry E (2013) Individual variation in resisting temptation: implications for addiction. Neurosci Biobehav Rev 37:1955-75
Meyer, Paul J; Lovic, Vedran; Saunders, Benjamin T et al. (2012) Quantifying individual variation in the propensity to attribute incentive salience to reward cues. PLoS One 7:e38987
Meyer, Paul J; Ma, Sean T; Robinson, Terry E (2012) A cocaine cue is more preferred and evokes more frequency-modulated 50-kHz ultrasonic vocalizations in rats prone to attribute incentive salience to a food cue. Psychopharmacology (Berl) 219:999-1009
Saunders, Benjamin T; Robinson, Terry E (2012) The role of dopamine in the accumbens core in the expression of Pavlovian-conditioned responses. Eur J Neurosci 36:2521-32
Jedynak, Jakub P; Cameron, Courtney M; Robinson, Terry E (2012) Repeated methamphetamine administration differentially alters fos expression in caudate-putamen patch and matrix compartments and nucleus accumbens. PLoS One 7:e34227
Flagel, S B; Cameron, C M; Pickup, K N et al. (2011) A food predictive cue must be attributed with incentive salience for it to induce c-fos mRNA expression in cortico-striatal-thalamic brain regions. Neuroscience 196:80-96

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