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A dual role for nicotine in reinforcement: the interaction between nicotine and non-drug cues (What can a lab rat tell us about why people smoke?) Nadia Chaudhri Center for Neuroscience University of Pittsburgh Will press for nicotine
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Why do people smoke? “nicotine is the drug in tobacco that causes addiction” Health Consequences of Smoking: Nicotine Addiction. A report by the Surgeon General, USDHHS, 1988
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Nonpharmacological factors Smoking cigarettes is more rewarding than isolated nicotine delivery De-nicotinized cigarettes reduce craving and withdrawal Sensory stimuli, such as visual and olfactory cues associated with smoke are reinforcing
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Smoking cigarettes is more rewarding than isolated nicotine delivery Nonpharmacological factors De-nicotinized cigarettes reduce craving and withdrawal Sensory stimuli, such as visual and olfactory cues associated with smoke are reinforcing Do nonpharmacological stimuli impact nicotine self-administration in rats?
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Nonpharmacological stimuli DO impact nicotine reinforcement in rats Nicotine and nonpharmacological stimuli interact synergistically to result in high levels of operant behavior Dual-reinforcing properties of nicotine: Relatively weak, primary reinforcer Enhance the reinforcing properties of behaviorally relevant, nonpharmacological environmental stimuli Donny EC, Chaudhri N & Caggiula AR et al. (2003) Psychopharmacology
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FR 1FR 5FR 2 Fixed-ratio Reinforcement Schedule (60 min) Responses : 3, 6, 10, 15, 20, 25, 32, 40 … Infusion # 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 … Progressive Ratio Reinforcement Schedule (4 hours) Signals Cue Light House Light Infusion Nic Delivery (on) Nic + (off) Nic - Compound Visual Stimulus Male, Sprague Dawley rats Reversed light/dark cycle 20 g food per day Prior food training Nicotine self-administration in rats
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Contingent nicotine + VS Acquisition of NIC-SA with or without VS
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Contingent nicotine + VS Contingent Saline + VS Contingent Saline + no VS Acquisition of NIC-SA with or without VS
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Contingent nicotine + VS Contingent Saline + no VS Contingent nicotine + no VS Contingent Saline + VS Acquisition of NIC-SA with or without VS
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Contingent nicotine + VS Contingent nicotine + no VS Contingent Saline + VS Nicotine + VS - additive Acquisition of NIC-SA with or without VS
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Acquisition of NIC-SA without VS: dose-response
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Interim summary 1.Nicotine does function as a primary reinforcer, although this effect is relatively weak in the absence of a nonpharmacological stimulus 2. Nicotine interacts synergistically with non-drug stimuli to promote stable, high levels of operant behavior 3.Like nicotine, the VS we use is also a weak primary reinforcer
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How does such a powerfully addictive behavior, smoking, emerge from such a weak primary reinforcer, nicotine? Smoking paradox Is nicotine functioning as more than just a primary reinforcer? How can a weak primary reinforcer, nicotine, synergize with environmental stimuli to produce high rates of self-administration in rats (and smoking in people)?
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NIC Impact of contingency on reinforced behavior Will press for NIC + VS Will press For VS
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Impact of noncontingent NIC on responding for the VS Donny EC, Chaudhri N & Caggiula AR et al. (2003) Psychopharmacology
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Impact of noncontingent NIC on responding for the VS Donny EC, Chaudhri N & Caggiula AR et al. (2003) Psychopharmacology
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Interim summary 1)Is noncontingent nicotine as effective at enhancing the reinforcing value of the VS across a range of doses, and does it impact motivation to obtain the VS when assessed using a progressive ratio reinforcement schedule? 2) Does noncontingent nicotine enhance the salience of all nonpharmacological stimuli equally? Nicotine, delivered noncontingently, elevated responding for a weakly reinforcing, nonpharmacological stimulus, suggesting that nicotine can enhance the reinforcing properties of: Rats: Environmental stimuli in self-administration experiments Humans: Sight, smell, taste of cigarette smoke and other stimuli in environment while smoking.
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Impact of noncontingent NIC : dose-response
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Impact of noncontingent NIC on a PR schedule
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Does noncontingent nicotine enhance the salience of all nonpharmacological stimuli equally? STIMULUS = 5 second tone onset and 5 second house light offset Group 1 - PAIRED Sucrose (60) Stimulus (30) Pavlovian conditioning Days 1-14; levers retracted Group 2 - UNPAIRED Sucrose (60) Stimulus (30) 30 min Pavlovian-to-Instrumental Transfer (Test-day) Day 15; levers extended; no sucrose; 30-min from 1 st press Self-administration sessions (FR and PR) PAIRED UNPAIRED Saline + CR Contingent NIC + CR Contingent NIC + CR Noncontingent NIC + CR Noncontingent NIC + CR Test-day Paired Unpaired
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Impact of noncontingent NIC on a differentially reinforcing, nonpharmacological stimulus
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Impact of noncontingent NIC on a differentially reinforcing, nonpharmacological stimulus Paired Stimulus
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Impact of noncontingent NIC on a differentially reinforcing, nonpharmacological stimulus Paired Stimulus
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Impact of noncontingent NIC on a differentially reinforcing, nonpharmacological stimulus Unpaired Stimulus
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Impact of noncontingent NIC on a differentially reinforcing, nonpharmacological stimulus Unpaired Stimulus
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Impact of noncontingent NIC on a differentially reinforcing, nonpharmacological stimulus
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Impact of noncontingent NIC on a differentially reinforcing, nonpharmacological stimulus Paired Stimulus
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Impact of noncontingent NIC on a differentially reinforcing, nonpharmacological stimulus Unpaired Stimulus
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Impact of noncontingent NIC on a differentially reinforcing, nonpharmacological stimulus Unpaired Stimulus
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Impact of noncontingent NIC on a differentially reinforcing, nonpharmacological stimulus
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Interim summary 1.The reinforcement-enhancing effects of nicotine are not specific to one type of nonpharmacological stimulus, the VS 2.The ability of nicotine to enhance the reinforcing properties of a nonpharmacological stimulus depends on the reinforcing value of that stimulus 3.Like self-administered nicotine, response-independent nicotine delivery can increase motivation to obtain nonpharmacological stimuli, as tested with a progressive ratio schedule
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“People smoke to receive nicotine” Primary Reinforcer: Behaviors that lead to nicotine delivery are strengthened “Nicotine makes people smoke “Nicotine makes people smoke” Reinforcement-Enhancing: Nicotine can amplify or enhance the motivational/reinforcing properties of other stimuli by a mechanism that is not dependent on a predictable temporal (contingent) association with either the stimuli or the behavior Why do people smoke?
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Caggiula Lab Tony Caggiula Alan Sved Eric Donny Matt Palmatier Xiu Liu Sheri Booth Maysa Gharib Laure Craven Prema Chaudhary Donna Pacelli Caroline Bouris Shannon Allen Peter Olausson NIDA HHMI
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