Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 14, 4289-4298, Copyright © 1994 by Society for Neuroscience
Gradual tolerance of metabolic activity is produced in mesolimbic regions by chronic cocaine treatment, while subsequent cocaine challenge activates extrapyramidal regions of rat brain
RP Hammer Jr and ES Cooke
Laboratory of Cellular and Molecular Neuropharmacology, University of Hawaii School of Medicine, Honolulu 96822.
Acute administration of cocaine is known to enhance extracellular dopamine
levels in the striatum and to activate immediate-early gene expression in
striatal neurons. Regional cerebral metabolic rate for glucose (rCMRglc)
reportedly increases in extrapyramidal and mesolimbic brain regions in
response to acute cocaine treatment. However, chronic administration
attenuates the cocaine-induced enhancement of regional dopamine response
and the induction of immediate-early gene expression in these regions.
Chronic treatment also produces tolerance to cocaine's reinforcing effects.
Thus, differential responses to cocaine occur with increasing length of
treatment. Therefore, we examined the time course of effects of repeated
daily cocaine treatment on rCMRglc in rat brain. Acute administration of 10
mg/kg cocaine slightly increased rCMRglc in mesolimbic and extrapyramidal
regions. However, no significant effects were observed until more than 7 d
of treatment, whereupon rCMRglc was reduced compared to saline treatment in
the infralimbic portion of the medial prefrontal cortex, nucleus accumbens,
olfactory tubercle, habenula, amygdala, and a few other brain regions. In
contrast, after 13 d of 10 mg/kg cocaine treatment, challenge with 30 mg/kg
cocaine increased rCMRglc in the striatum, globus pallidus, entopeduncular
nucleus, subthalamus, substantia nigra pars reticulata, and a few other
regions without affecting limbic or mesolimbic regions. Thus, repeated
daily treatment with a low dose of cocaine gradually decreased metabolic
activity particularly in mesolimbic regions. Subsequent treatment with a
higher dose produced metabolic activation mostly in extrapyramidal regions.
This effect of chronic treatment could represent tolerance to the initial
metabolic response, which can be replicated thereafter but only by
increasing the drug dose. These results suggest that tolerance to the
metabolic effects of cocaine in selective mesolimbic circuits may
contribute to the development of behavioral dependence with repeated
exposure.