Brain region behind drug-seeking behaviour identified
Washington, February 7 (ANI): A brain region that gets activated by reward has been found to drive drug-seeking behaviour in rats, say researchers.
Barry Everitt and David Belin of the Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Cambridge, demonstrated the function of the circuitry by selectively switching off drug-seeking in the animals.
The researchers said that their findings show the key role of the brain region called the striatum.
During the study, the researchers first trained rats to press a lever to obtain cocaine, which also activated a signal light. They manipulated the schedule of cocaine-receiving and lever-pressing so that it would induce compulsive lever-pressing in the rats to obtain cocaine.
The researchers found that, when they used surgery and drugs to sever the functional connection between the two striatal regions, the result was decreased drug-seeking behaviour in rats, compared with rats in which the disconnection was not made.
In another experiment, the researchers showed that the “disconnected” rats did not show reduced ability to acquire such training responses.
Both normal and disconnected rats could learn to pull a chain to receive a sugar-water reward so long as the activity was continuously reinforced.
“The results of the present study demonstrate that intrastriatal connectivity is a key aspect of the functional organization of the striatum and also a critically important component of the complex neural mechanisms involved in the development of drug addiction,” the researchers concluded.
The study has been published in the journal Neuron. (ANI)
Related posts:
- Unravelling brain activity that drives impulsive behaviour in teens
- Maternal behaviour creates new neurons
- Monetary gain and high-risk tactics trigger brain activity
- Cocaine’s effects on brain metabolism may boost abuse
- Study shows precuneus region in human, monkey brain is divided into 4 regions
- Stimulating one brain cell is all it takes to change behaviour
- Brain region that helps us understand written words identified
- Brain mechanisms of cocaine addicts may pave way for future therapies
- New receptor complex in brain identified
- Brain region responsible for our sense of personal space identified
- Brain abnormalities underlying key element of Borderline Personality Disorder identified
- Brain structures behind emotional balance in threatening situations identified
- ‘Brain signature’ for cigarette cravings identified
- Brain’s ‘eureka’ circuit identified
- Key mechanism linked to cocaine addiction identified
