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      Adolescent Traumatic Brain Injury Induces Chronic Mesolimbic Neuroinflammation with Concurrent Enhancement in the Rewarding Effects of Cocaine in Mice during Adulthood

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          Abstract

          Clinical psychiatric disorders of depression, anxiety, and substance abuse are most prevalent after traumatic brain injury (TBI). Pre-clinical research has focused on depression and anxiety post-injury; however, virtually no data exist examining whether the preference for illicit drugs is affected by traumatic injury in the developing adolescent brain. Using the controlled cortical impact (CCI) model of TBI and the conditioned place preference (CPP) assay, we tested the underlying hypothesis that brain injury during adolescence exacerbates the rewarding properties of cocaine in adulthood possibly through an active inflammatory status in the mesolimbic pathway. Six-week old, C57BL/6 mice sustained a single CCI-TBI to the right somatosensory cortex. CPP experiments with cocaine began 2 weeks post-TBI. Animals receiving cocaine displayed significant place preference shifts compared to saline controls. Further, within the cocaine-experienced cohort, moderate CCI-TBI during adolescence significantly increased the preference shift in adulthood when compared to naïve controls. Additionally, persistent neuroinflammatory responses were observed in the cortex, nucleus accumbens (NAc), and ventral tegmental area post-CCI-TBI. Significant increases in both astrocytic, glial fibrillary acidic protein, and microglial, ionization basic acid 1, markers were observed in the NAc at the end of CPP testing. Moreover, analysis using focused array gene expression panels identified the upregulation of numerous inflammatory genes in moderate CCI-TBI animals, compared to naïve controls, both in the cortex and NAc at 2 weeks post-TBI, before onset of cocaine administration. These results suggest that sustaining moderate TBI during adolescence may augment the rewarding effects of psychostimulants in adulthood, possibly by induction of chronic mesolimbic neuroinflammation.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J Neurotrauma
          J. Neurotrauma
          neu
          Journal of Neurotrauma
          Mary Ann Liebert, Inc. (140 Huguenot Street, 3rd FloorNew Rochelle, NY 10801USA )
          0897-7151
          1557-9042
          01 January 2017
          01 January 2017
          : 34
          : 1
          : 165-181
          Affiliations
          [ 1 ]Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Temple University School of Medicine , Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
          [ 2 ]The Center for Substance Abuse Research, Temple University School of Medicine , Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
          [ 3 ]The Shriners Hospitals Pediatric Research Center, Temple University School of Medicine , Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
          [ 4 ]Department of Pharmacology, Temple University School of Medicine , Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
          Author notes
          Address correspondence to: Servio H. Ramirez, PhD, Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Temple University School of Medicine 3500 North Broad Street, Philadelphia, PA 19140, E-mail: servio@ 123456temple.edu
          Article
          PMC5198083 PMC5198083 5198083 10.1089/neu.2015.4275
          10.1089/neu.2015.4275
          5198083
          27026056
          5d45ce59-9dab-48c7-bf54-c4cd117cdb9b
          Copyright 2016, Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.
          History
          Page count
          Figures: 7, References: 53, Pages: 17
          Categories
          Original Articles

          addiction,adolescent,neuroinflammation,psychostimulants,TBI
          addiction, adolescent, neuroinflammation, psychostimulants, TBI

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