Skip to main content

Cocaine and desipramine elicit distinct striatal noradrenergic and behavioral responses in selectively bred obesity-resistant and obesity-prone rats.

Citation
Vollbrecht, P. J., et al. “Cocaine And Desipramine Elicit Distinct Striatal Noradrenergic And Behavioral Responses In Selectively Bred Obesity-Resistant And Obesity-Prone Rats.”. Behavioural Brain Research, pp. 137-143.
Center University of Michigan
Author Peter J Vollbrecht, Kathryn M Nesbitt, Omar S Mabrouk, Aaron M Chadderdon, Emily M Jutkiewicz, Robert T Kennedy, Carrie R Ferrario
Keywords Diet induced obesity, food intake, Microdialysis, Norepinephrine, Norepinephrine transporter, Striatum
Abstract

Previous studies have demonstrated a role for norepinephrine (NE) in energy regulation and feeding, and basal differences have been observed in hypothalamic NE systems in obesity-prone vs. obesity-resistant rats. Differences in the function of brain reward circuits, including in the nucleus accumbens (NAc), have been shown in obesity-prone vs. obesity-resistant populations, leading many researchers to explore the role of striatal dopamine in obesity. However, alterations in NE transmission also affect NAc mediated behaviors. Therefore, here we examined differences in striatal NE and the response to norepinephrine transporter blockers in obesity-prone and obesity-resistant rats. We found that striatal NE levels increase following systemic cocaine administration in obesity-prone, but not obesity-resistant rats. This could result from either blockade of striatal norepinephrine transporters (NET) by cocaine leading to reduced NE reuptake, or circuit-based responses following cocaine administration resulting in increased NE release. Retrodialysis of the NET inhibitor, desipramine, into the ventral striatum did not cause selective increases in striatal NE levels in obesity-prone rats, suggesting that circuit-based mechanisms underlie NE increases following systemic cocaine administration. Consistent with this, systemic desipramine treatment decreased locomotor activity in obesity-prone, but not obesity-resistant rats. Furthermore, obesity-prone rats were also more sensitive to desipramine-induced reductions in food intake compared to obesity-resistant rats. Taken together, these data expand our understanding of differences in NE systems of obesity-prone vs. resistant rats, and provide new insights into basal differences in striatal systems that may influence feeding behavior.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Behavioural brain research
Volume
346
Number of Pages
137-143
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
1872-7549
DOI
10.1016/j.bbr.2017.11.009
Alternate Journal
Behav. Brain Res.
PMID
29129597
PMCID
PMC5860948
Download citation