TY - JOUR T1 - Plasticity-Associated Gene <em>Krox24/Zif268</em> Is Required for Long-Lasting Behavioral Effects of Cocaine JF - The Journal of Neuroscience JO - J. Neurosci. SP - 4956 LP - 4960 DO - 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4601-05.2006 VL - 26 IS - 18 AU - Emmanuel Valjent AU - Benjamin Aubier AU - Anne-Gaëlle Corbillé AU - Karen Brami-Cherrier AU - Jocelyne Caboche AU - Piotr Topilko AU - Jean-Antoine Girault AU - Denis Hervé Y1 - 2006/05/03 UR - http://www.jneurosci.org/content/26/18/4956.abstract N2 - The extracellular signal-regulated kinases (ERKs) 1/2 pathway is stimulated by drugs of abuse in striatal neurons through coincident activation of dopamine D1 and glutamate NMDA receptors and is critical for long-lasting behavioral effects of these drugs. Although regulation of transcription is a major target of ERK, the precise mechanisms by which it contributes to behavioral alterations is not known. We examined the role of Zif268, an immediate-early gene induced by drugs of abuse under the control of ERK, in behavioral responses to cocaine using knock-in mutant mice in which Zif268 was replaced by LacZ. No biochemical or behavioral differences between mutant and wild-type mice were observed in basal conditions or in acute responses to cocaine injection. In contrast, locomotor sensitization to single or repeated cocaine injections was dramatically diminished in both heterozygous and homozygous Zif268 mutant mice. Conditioned place preference in response to cocaine was prevented in Zif268-deficient mice. This effect was not attributable to a general learning deficit because the mutant mice displayed normal conditioned place preference when food was used as reward. Our results provide direct genetic evidence for the requirement of Zif268 for long-lasting association of environmental context with specific behavioral responses after short exposures to cocaine. They also underline the common molecular machinery involved in long-lasting drug-induced behavioral alterations and the formation of other types of memory. ER -