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Browsing by Author "Ma, Yao-Ying"
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Item Aberrations in Incentive Learning and Responding to Heroin in Male Rats After Adolescent or Adult Chronic Binge-Like Alcohol Exposure(Wiley, 2020-06) Galaj, Ewa; Barrera, Eddy; Morris, Debra; Ma, Yao-Ying; Ranaldi, Robert; Pharmacology and Toxicology, School of MedicineBackground and purpose: Binge drinking is a serious problem among adolescents and young adults despite its adverse consequences on the brain and behavior. One area that remains poorly understood concerns the impact of chronic intermittent ethanol (CIE) exposure on incentive learning. Methods: Here, we examined the effects of CIE exposure during different developmental stages on conditioned approach and conditioned reward learning in rats experiencing acute or protracted withdrawal from alcohol. Two or 21 days after adolescent or adult CIE exposure, male rats were exposed to pairings of a light stimulus (CS) and food pellets for 3 consecutive daily sessions (30 CS-food pellet pairings per session). This was followed by conditioned approach testing measuring responses (food trough head entries) to the CS-only presentations and by conditioned reward testing measuring responses on a lever producing the CS and on another producing a tone. We then measured behavioral sensitization to repeated injections of heroin (2 mg/kg/d for 9 days). Results: Adolescent and adult alcohol-treated rats showed significantly impaired conditioned reward learning regardless of withdrawal period (acute or prolonged). We found no evidence of changes to conditioned approach learning after adolescent or adult exposure to CIE. Finally, in addition to producing long-term impairments in incentive learning, CIE exposure enhanced locomotor activity in response to heroin and had no effect on behavioral sensitization to heroin regardless of age and withdrawal period. Conclusions: Our work sets a framework for identifying CIE-induced alterations in incentive learning and inducing susceptibility to subsequent opioid effects.Item Limited versus extended cocaine intravenous self‐administration: Behavioral effects and electrophysiological changes in insular cortex(Wiley, 2021-02) Luo, Yi-Xiao; Huang, Donald; Guo, Changyong; Ma, Yao-Ying; Pharmacology and Toxicology, School of MedicineAims: Limited vs extended drug exposure has been proposed as one of the key factors in determining the risk of relapse, which is the primary characteristic of addiction behaviors. The current studies were designed to explore the related behavioral effects and neuronal alterations in the insular cortex (IC), an important brain region involved in addiction. Methods: Experiments started with rats at the age of 35 days, a typical adolescent stage when initial drug exposure occurs often in humans. The drug-seeking/taking behaviors, and membrane properties and intrinsic excitability of IC pyramidal neurons were measured on withdrawal day (WD) 1 and WD 45-48 after limited vs extended cocaine intravenous self-administration (IVSA). Results: We found higher cocaine-taking behaviors at the late withdrawal period after limited vs extended cocaine IVSA. We also found minor but significant effects of limited but not extended cocaine exposure on the kinetics and amplitude of action potentials on WD 45, in IC pyramidal neurons. Conclusion: Our results indicate potential high risks of relapse in young rats with limited but not extended drug exposure, although the adaptations detected in the IC may not be sufficient to explain the neural changes of higher drug-taking behaviors induced by limited cocaine IVSA.Item Nucleus accumbens shell small conductance potassium channels underlie adolescent ethanol exposure-induced anxiety(Springer Nature, 2019-10) Shan, Lili; Galaj, Ewa; Ma, Yao-Ying; Pharmacology and Toxicology, School of MedicineAlcohol use typically begins in adolescence, increasing the likelihood of adult mental disorders such as anxiety. However, the cellular mechanisms underlying the consequences of adolescent alcohol exposure as well as the behavioral consequences remain poorly understood. We examined the effects of adolescent or adult chronic intermittent ethanol (CIE) exposure on intrinsic excitability of striatal medium-sized spiny neurons (MSNs) and anxiety levels. Rats underwent one of the following procedures: (1) light-dark transition (LDT) and open-field (OF) tests to evaluate anxiety levels and general locomotion; (2) whole-cell patch clamp recordings and biocytin labeling to assess excitability of striatal MSNs, as well as morphological properties; and (3) western blot immunostaining to determine small conductance (SK) calcium-activated potassium channel protein levels. Three weeks, but not 2 days, after CIE treatment, adolescent CIE-treated rats showed shorter crossover latency from the light to dark side in the LDT test and higher MSN excitability in the nucleus accumbens shell (NAcS). Furthermore, the amplitude of the medium afterhyperpolarization (mAHP), mediated by SK channels, and SK3 protein levels in the NAcS decreased concomitantly. Finally, increased anxiety levels, increased excitability, and decreased amplitude of mAHP of NAcS MSNs were reversed by SK channel activator 1-EBIO and mimicked by the SK channel blocker apamin. Thus, adolescent ethanol exposure increases adult anxiety-like behavior by downregulating SK channel function and protein expression, which leads to an increase of intrinsic excitability in NAcS MSNs. SK channels in the NAcS may serve as a target to treat adolescent alcohol binge exposure-induced mental disorders, such as anxiety in adulthood.Item Spinophilin Cell Type-Specifically Mediates Metabotrophic Glutamate Receptor 5-dependent Excessive Grooming(2022-09) Morris, Cameron W.; Truitt, William; Atwood, Brady; Baucum, Anthony J., II; Ma, Yao-Ying; McKinzie, DavidCompulsive and repetitive behaviors in obsessive-compulsive spectrum disorders (OCSDs) are associated with perturbations in the sensorimotor striatum. Repetitive behaviors are associated with cell type-specific adaptations in striatal direct- and indirect-pathway medium spiny neurons (dMSNs and iMSNs, respectively). Furthermore, preclinical models for understanding OCSDs, such as constitutive knockout of disks large associated protein 3 (SAPAP3), suggest repetitive motor dysfunction, such as excessive grooming, is associated with increased metabotropic glutamate receptor 5 (mGluR5) activity that increases dMSN function relative to iMSNs in the sensorimotor striatum. However, MSN subtype-specific signaling mechanisms that mediate mGluR5-dependent adaptations underlying excessive grooming are not fully understood. Reversible phosphorylation of mGluR5’s C-terminal domain is one mechanism to regulate mGluR5 signaling, however, unlike kinases, promiscuous phosphatases require targeting proteins to shuttle them into contact with their targets. Therefore, phosphatase targeting proteins may be intimately involved in mediating mGluR5-dependent striatal adaptions underlying repetitive behaviors, such as excessive grooming in SAPAP3 deficient mice. Spinophilin, a major striatal postsynaptic phosphatase targeting protein, regulates striatal function, mGluR5 signaling, and forms a protein-protein interaction with SAPAP3 that is increased by mGluR5 co-expression. Therefore, we hypothesized that spinophilin expression in striatal medium spiny neurons mediates mGluR5-dependent excessive grooming. To test this, we used a novel conditional spinophilin mouse line combined with functional, behavioral, and molecular approaches to elucidate spinophilin's MSN subtype-specific contributions to rodent excessive grooming behavior associated with increased mGluR5 function. We found that loss of spinophilin in either MSN subtype abrogated plasticity in the sensorimotor striatum associated with increased mGluR5 function and decreased two models of excessive grooming associated with increased mGluR5 function—SAPAP3 deficient mice and global administration of a mGluR5-specific positive allosteric modulator (VU0360172). Additionally, we found that spinophilin’s protein interaction with mGluR5 correlates with grooming behavior and loss of spinophilin shifts mGluR5 interactions from lipid-raft associated proteins toward postsynaptic density proteins implicated in psychiatric disorders. Collectively, these results identify spinophilin as a novel striatal signaling hub molecule in MSNs that MSN subtype-specifically mediates striatal adaptations associated with repetitive motor dysfunction in psychiatric disorders.Item Striatal Morphological and Functional Alterations Induced by Prenatal Alcohol Exposure(Elsevier, 2019-04) Ma, Yao-Ying; Pharmacology and Toxicology, School of MedicinePrenatal alcohol exposure (PAE) is an insidious yet preventable cause of developmental disability. The prenatal stage is a critical period for brain development with the concurrence of high vulnerability to the acute and prolonged effects of PAE. There is substantial evidence from both human observations and laboratory experiments that PAE is a common risk factor that predisposes to an array of postnatal mental disorders, including emotional, cognitive, and motor deficits. Although it is well accepted that PAE causes substantial morbidity, available treatments are limited. One reason is the lack of sufficient understanding about the neuroalterations induced by PAE, and how these changes contribute to PAE-induced mental disorders. Among a number of brain structures that have been explored extensively in PAE, the striatum has attracted great attention in the last 20 years in the field of PAE neurobiology. Interestingly, in animal models, the striatum has been considered as a pivotal switch of brain dysfunction induced by PAE, such as addiction, anxiety, depression, and neurodegeneration. In this review, we focus on recent advances in the understanding of morphological and functional changes in brain regions related to alterations after PAE, in particular the striatum. Because this region is central for behavior, emotion and cognition, there is an urgent need for more studies to uncover the PAE-induced alterations at the circuit, neuronal, synaptic and molecular levels, which will not only improve our understanding of the neuroplasticity induced by PAE, but also provide novel biological targets to treat PAE-related mental disorders with translational significance.