Intellectual Pursuits May
Buffer
the Brain Against Addiction
By Yasmin Anwar,Berkeley
News, July 13, 2015
the Brain Against Addiction
By Yasmin Anwar,
Scientists tracked cocaine cravings in more than 70 adult
male mice and found that those rodents whose daily drill included exploration,
learning and finding hidden tasty morsels were less likely than their
enrichment-deprived counterparts to seek solace in a chamber where they had
been given cocaine.
“We have compelling behavioral evidence that self-directed
exploration and learning altered their reward systems so that when cocaine was
experienced it made less of an impact on their brain,” said Linda Wilbrecht,
assistant professor of psychology and neuroscience at UC Berkeley and senior
author of the paper just published in the journal, Neuropharmacology.
By contrast, mice who were not intellectually challenged
and/or whose activities and diets were restricted, were eager to return to the
quarters where they had been injected with cocaine for weeks on end.
“We know that mice living in deprived conditions show higher
levels of drug-seeking behavior than those living in stimulating environments,
and we sought to develop a brief intervention that would promote resilience in
the deprived animals,” said study lead author Josiah Boivin, a Ph.D. student in
neuroscience at UC San Francisco who conducted the research at UC Berkeley as
part of his thesis work.
Drug abuse and addiction rank among the world’s more costly,
destructive and seemingly insurmountable problems. Previous studies have found
that poverty, trauma, mental illness and other environmental and physiological
stressors can alter the brain’s reward circuitry and make us more susceptible
to substance abuse.
The good news about this latest study is that it offers
scalable interventions against drug-seeking behaviors, albeit through evidence
based on animal behavior.
“Our data are exciting because they suggest that positive
learning experiences, through education or play in a structured environment,
could sculpt and develop brain circuits to build resilience in at-risk
individuals, and that even brief cognitive interventions may be somewhat
protective and last a relatively long time,” Wilbrecht said.
Intellectually challenged
mice vs. deprived mice
Researchers compared the lure of drugs, specifically
cocaine, in three sets of mice: The test or “trained” mice were put through a
nine-day cognitive training program based on exploration, incentives and
rewards while their “yoked-to-trained” counterparts received rewards but no
challenges. The “standard-housed” mice stayed in their home cages with
restricted diets and activities.
For a few hours each day, the trained mice and
yoked-to-trained mice were set loose in adjacent chambers. The trained mice
were free to explore and engage in enrichment activities, which included
digging up Honey Nut Cheerios in a pot of scented wood shavings. The exercise
kept them on their toes because the rules for how to find the treats would
change on a regular basis.
Meanwhile, their yoked-to-trained counterparts received a
Honey Nut Cheerio each time their trained partner hit the jackpot, but did not
have to work for it. As for the standard-housed mice, they remained in their
cages without enrichment opportunities or Honey Nut Cheerios. After the
cognitive training phase of the experiment, all three sets of mice remained in
their cages for a month.
Cocaine conditioning tests
desire for drugs
Next, the mice were set loose, one by one, to explore two
adjoining chambers in a plexiglass box, which differed from one another in
smell, texture and pattern. The researchers recorded which chamber each mouse
preferred and then set about changing their preference by giving them cocaine
in the chamber that they had repeatedly not favored.
For the drug seeking test, the mice received mock
injections, and were freed to explore both chambers for 20 minutes, using the
open doorway to scamper back and forth. At first, all the mice overwhelmingly
returned to the chamber where they had presumably enjoyed the cocaine. But in
subsequent weekly drug seeking tests, the mice who had received cognitive
training showed less preference for the chamber where they had been high on
cocaine. And that pattern continued.
“Overall, the data suggest that deprivation may confer
vulnerability to drug seeking behavior and that brief interventions may promote
long-term resilience,” Wilbrecht said.
Denise Piscopo, an assistant professor at the University of Oregon and former member of Wilbrecht’s
lab, is the third co-author on the paper.
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