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Glutamate-Glutamine Transfer and Chronic Stress-Induced Sex Differences in Cocaine Responses.

Citation
Shimamoto, Akiko, et al. “Glutamate-Glutamine Transfer and Chronic Stress-Induced Sex Differences in Cocaine Responses”. 2018. Neuroscience, vol. 391, 2018, pp. 104–119.
Center Vanderbilt University
Author Akiko Shimamoto, Virginie Rappeneau, Havisha Munjal, Tonie Farris, Christopher Davis, Alicia Wilson, Malcolm Edwards, Cindy Moore, Collin Reynolds, Charles K Meshul
Keywords Chronic social defeat stress, Cocaine, Glutamate transporter-1, mitochondria, Sex difference, Sodium-coupled neutral amino acid transporter 1/2
Abstract

Substance use disorders (SUD) often co-occur with other mental disorders such as major depression (MD). Our previous findings revealed sex-dependent changes in extracellular levels of glutamate (Glu) and glutamine (Gln) in the nucleus accumbens (NAc) in Long-Evans rats that were exposed to 21 days of chronic social defeat stress (CSDS), which models MD. The current study investigated the role of a Gln transporter called sodium-coupled neutral amino acid transporter subtype 1/2 (SNAT 1/2), phosphate-activated glutaminase (PAG), and astrocytic glutamate transporter-1 (GLT-1) on CSDS animals exposed to cocaine. Before cocaine exposure, CSDS males already showed decreased levels of SNAT 1/2 in the NAc and prefrontal cortex (PFC) compared to non-CSDS controls. The reduction in SNAT 1/2 levels was associated with an increase in Gln localization in the mitochondrial outer membrane in accumbal glutamatergic nerve terminals projecting from the PFC. CSDS females showed increased GLT-1 levels in the NAc and PFC compared to non-CSDS controls. Both acute and repeated cocaine exposure attenuated locomotor responses in CSDS males but increased those in CSDS females. Cocaine reduced SNAT 1/2 levels in the NAc but increased them in the PFC in CSDS males. Additionally, both PAG and GLT-1 levels were increased in the PFC in CSDS males. On the other hand, cocaine reduced SNAT 1/2 and GLT-1 levels in the NAc and PFC in CSDS females. Our results show that CSDS altered locomotor responses upon cocaine exposure in a sex-dependent manner that may be mediated by molecules associated with the Glu-Gln transfer.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Neuroscience
Volume
391
Number of Pages
104-119
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
1873-7544
DOI
10.1016/j.neuroscience.2018.09.009
Alternate Journal
Neuroscience
PMID
30240589
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