RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Stress-induced sensitization and glucocorticoids. II. Sensitization of the increase in extracellular dopamine induced by cocaine depends on stress-induced corticosterone secretion JF The Journal of Neuroscience JO J. Neurosci. FD Society for Neuroscience SP 7189 OP 7195 DO 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.15-11-07189.1995 VO 15 IS 11 A1 Rouge-Pont, F A1 Marinelli, M A1 Le Moal, M A1 Simon, H A1 Piazza, PV YR 1995 UL http://www.jneurosci.org/content/15/11/7189.abstract AB Secretion of glucocorticoids seems to control stress-induced sensitization of the behavioral effects of drugs of abuse by acting on the mesencephalic dopaminergic transmission, the principal neural substrate of sensitization. In order to investigate the mechanisms of this interaction between glucocorticoids and dopamine, we studied the sensitization of the increase in extracellular concentration of dopamine induced by cocaine in male rats in which corticosterone secretion was either intact or blocked. Extracellular concentrations of dopamine were evaluated in the nucleus accumbens of freely moving animals by means of microdialysis. Metyrapone, an inhibitor of corticosterone synthesis, was used to block stress-induced corticosterone secretion. Food-restriction (90% of the initial body weight) was the stressor used to induce sensitization. It was found that metyrapone (100 mg/kg s.c. twice a day for 8 d) suppressed stress- induced sensitization of the increase in accumbens dopamine induced by cocaine (10 mg/kg, i.p.) and sensitization of cocaine-induced locomotion Metyrapone suppressed both the development and the expression of sensitization. Thus, sensitization was equally blocked when the metyrapone treatment started either 1 d before the start of food-restriction or 8 d later, that is, when food-restriction-induced sensitization to cocaine was already established. In conclusion, our results suggest that glucocorticoids modify sensitization of the behavioral effects of cocaine by acting on extracellular concentrations of dopamine. Since addictive properties of psychostimulants seem mediated by the increase in extracellular concentrations of dopamine they induce, these findings may have implications for the development of new therapeutic strategies of addiction.