K D Carr

New York University USA, New York City, NY, USA

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Publications (68)181.78 Total impact

  • Article: A food restriction protocol that increases drug reward decreases tropomyosin receptor kinase B in the ventral tegmental area, with no effect on brain-derived neurotrophic factor or tropomyosin receptor kinase B protein levels in dopaminergic forebrain regions.
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    ABSTRACT: Food restriction (FR) decreases brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) expression in hypothalamic and hindbrain regions that regulate feeding and metabolic efficiency, while increasing expression in hippocampal and neocortical regions. Drugs of abuse alter BDNF expression within the mesocorticolimbic dopamine (DA) pathway, and modifications of BDNF expression within this pathway alter drug-directed behavior. Although FR produces a variety of striatal neuroadaptations and potentiates the rewarding effects of abused drugs, the effects of FR on BDNF expression and function within the DA pathway are unknown. The primary purpose of the present study was to examine the effect of FR on protein levels of BDNF and its tropomyosin receptor kinase B (TrkB) receptor in component structures of the mesocorticolimbic pathway. Three to four weeks of FR, with stabilization of rats at 80% of initial body weight, did not alter BDNF or TrkB levels in nucleus accumbens, caudate-putamen, or medial prefrontal cortex. However, FR decreased TrkB levels in the ventral tegmental area (VTA), without change in levels of BDNF protein or mRNA. The finding that FR also decreased TrkB levels in substantia nigra, with elevation of BDNF protein, suggests that decreased TrkB in VTA could be a residual effect of increased BDNF during an earlier phase of FR. Voltage-clamp recordings in VTA DA neurons indicated decreased glutamate receptor transmission. These data might predict lower average firing rates in FR relative to ad libitum fed subjects, which would be consistent with previous evidence of decreased striatal DA transmission and upregulation of postsynaptic DA receptor signaling. However, FR subjects also displayed elevated VTA levels of phospho-ERK1/2, which is an established mediator of synaptic plasticity. Because VTA neurons are heterogeneous with regard to neurochemistry, function, and target projections, the relationship(s) between the three changes observed in VTA, and their involvement in the augmented striatal and behavioral responsiveness of FR subjects to drugs of abuse, remains speculative.
    Neuroscience 09/2011; 197:330-8. · 3.38 Impact Factor
  • Article: AMPA receptor subunit GluR1 downstream of D-1 dopamine receptor stimulation in nucleus accumbens shell mediates increased drug reward magnitude in food-restricted rats.
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    ABSTRACT: Previous findings suggest that neuroadaptations downstream of D-1 dopamine (DA) receptor stimulation in nucleus accumbens (NAc) are involved in the enhancement of drug reward by chronic food restriction (FR). Given the high co-expression of D-1 and GluR1 AMPA receptors in NAc, and the regulation of GluR1 channel conductance and trafficking by D-1-linked intracellular signaling cascades, the present study examined effects of the D-1 agonist, SKF-82958, on NAc GluR1 phosphorylation, intracranial electrical self-stimulation reward (ICSS), and reversibility of reward effects by a polyamine GluR1 antagonist, 1-NA-spermine, in ad libitum fed (AL) and FR rats. Systemically administered SKF-82958, or brief ingestion of a 10% sucrose solution, increased NAc GluR1 phosphorylation on Ser845, but not Ser831, with a greater effect in FR than AL rats. Microinjection of SKF-82958 in NAc shell produced a reward-potentiating effect that was greater in FR than AL rats, and was reversed by co-injection of 1-NA-spermine. GluR1 abundance in whole cell and synaptosomal fractions of NAc did not differ between feeding groups, and microinjection of AMPA, while affecting ICSS, did not exert greater effects in FR than AL rats. These results suggest a role of NAc GluR1 in the reward-potentiating effect of D-1 DA receptor stimulation and its enhancement by FR. Moreover, GluR1 involvement appears to occur downstream of D-1 DA receptor stimulation rather than reflecting a basal increase in GluR1 expression or function. Based on evidence that phosphorylation of GluR1 on Ser845 primes synaptic strengthening, the present results may reflect a mechanism via which FR normally facilitates reward-related learning to re-align instrumental behavior with environmental contingencies under the pressure of negative energy balance.
    Neuroscience 11/2009; 165(4):1074-86. · 3.38 Impact Factor
  • Article: Feeding, body weight, and sensitivity to non-ingestive reward stimuli during and after 12-day continuous central infusions of melanocortin receptor ligands.
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    ABSTRACT: The brain melanocortin system mediates downstream effects of hypothalamic leptin and insulin signaling. Yet, there have been few studies of chronic intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) melanocortin receptor (MCR) agonist or antagonist infusion. Although there is evidence of interaction between melanocortin and dopamine (DA) systems, effects of chronic MCR ligand infusion on behavioral sensitivity to non-ingestive reward stimuli have not been investigated. The objective of this study was to investigate effects of chronic i.c.v. infusion of the MCR agonist, MTII, and the MCR antagonist, SHU9119, on food intake, body weight, and sensitivity to rewarding lateral hypothalamic electrical stimulation (LHSS) and the reward-potentiating (i.e., threshold-lowering) effect of D-amphetamine. The MCR antagonist, SHU9119 (0.02 microg/h) produced sustained hyperphagia and weight gain during the 12-day infusion period, followed by compensatory hypophagia and an arrest of body weight gain during the 24-day post-infusion period. At no point during the experiment was sensitivity to LHSS or D-amphetamine (0.25mg/kg, i.p.) altered. The MCR agonist, MTII (0.02 microg/h) produced a brief hypophagia (3 days) followed by a return to control levels of daily intake, but with body weight remaining at a reduced level throughout the 12-day infusion period. This was followed by compensatory hyperphagia and weight gain during the 24-day post-infusion period. There was no change in sensitivity to non-ingestive reward stimuli during the infusion of MTII. However, sensitivity to D-amphetamine was increased during the 24-day post-infusion period. It therefore seems that changes in ingestive behavior that occur during chronic MCR ligand infusion may not affect the response to non-ingestive reward stimuli. However, it is possible that the drive to re-feed and restore body weight following MCR agonist treatment includes neuroadaptations that enhance the incentive effects of drug stimuli.
    Peptides 12/2005; 26(11):2314-21. · 2.43 Impact Factor
  • Article: Food restriction increases NMDA receptor-mediated calcium-calmodulin kinase II and NMDA receptor/extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2-mediated cyclic amp response element-binding protein phosphorylation in nucleus accumbens upon D-1 dopamine receptor stimulation in rats.
    S L Haberny, K D Carr
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    ABSTRACT: Biological drive states exert homeostatic control in part by increasing the reinforcing effects of environmental incentive stimuli. An apparent by-product of this adaptive response is the enhanced acquisition of drug self-administration behavior in food-restricted (FR) animals. While previous research has demonstrated increased central sensitivity to rewarding effects of abused drugs and direct dopamine (DA) receptor agonists in FR subjects, the underlying neurobiology is not well understood. Recently, it was demonstrated that intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) injection of the D-1 DA receptor agonist, SKF-82958 produces a stronger activation of striatal extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) 1/2 and cyclic AMP response element-binding protein (CREB) in FR relative to ad libitum (AL) fed rats. The main purpose of the present study was to characterize the involvement and mechanisms of interaction between NMDA receptor function and the augmented cellular responses to D-1 DA receptor stimulation in nucleus accumbens (NAc) of FR rats. In experiment 1, Western immunoblotting was used to demonstrate that i.c.v. injection of SKF-82958 (20 microg) produces greater phosphorylation of the NMDA NR1 subunit and calcium-calmodulin kinase II (CaMK II) in NAc of FR as compared with AL rats. In experiment 2, pretreatment of subjects with the NMDA antagonist, MK-801 (1.0 mg/kg, i.p.) decreased SKF-82958-induced activation of CaMK II, ERK1/2 and CREB, and reversed the augmenting effect of FR on activation of all three proteins. In experiment 3, pretreatment with the mitogen-activated protein kinase/ERK kinase inhibitor SL-327 (60 mg/kg, i.p.) suppressed SKF-82958- induced activation of ERK1/2 and reversed the augmenting effect of FR on CREB activation. These results point to specific neuroadaptations in the NAc of FR rats whereby D-1 DA receptor stimulation leads to increased NMDA NR1 subunit phosphorylation and consequent increases in NMDA receptor-dependent CaMK II and ERK1/2 signaling, and increased NMDA receptor/ERK1/2-dependent phosphorylation of the nuclear transcription factor, CREB. The upregulated cellular responses to D-1 DA agonist challenge may play a role in the augmentation of drug reward and appetitive instrumental learning during periods of food restriction.
    Neuroscience 02/2005; 132(4):1035-43. · 3.38 Impact Factor
  • Article: Effects of chronic ICV leptin infusion on motor-activating effects of D-amphetamine in food-restricted and ad libitum fed rats.
    J Hao, S Cabeza de Vaca, K D Carr
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    ABSTRACT: Recently, attention has turned to the possibility that endocrine adiposity hormones, such as leptin, may regulate appetitively motivated behavior by modulating brain dopamine function. By extension, it has been hypothesized that the increased behavioral sensitivity of food-restricted, underweight rats to psychostimulant challenge may be triggered by the accompanying hypoleptinemia. The purpose of the present study was to determine whether two weeks of continuous intracerebroventricular (ICV) infusion of leptin alters the motor-activating effect of D-amphetamine (0.75 mg/kg, IP) in food-restricted rats. Lateral ventricular infusion of leptin, using a regimen that decreases food intake and body weight in ad libitum fed rats (12 microg/day), had no effect on the locomotor response to D-amphetamine in food-restricted rats that were maintained at 80% of prerestriction body weight. This result may indicate that hypoleptinemia is not involved in the induction/maintenance of neuroadaptations that mediate enhanced behavioral sensitivity to psychostimulant challenge. Interestingly, ad libitum fed rats treated with leptin displayed an increased locomotor response to D-amphetamine that was most prominent 3-5 days after termination of the infusion. Body weights and D-amphetamine sensitivity of these subjects returned to control values by 8-10 days postinfusion. The enhanced behavioral sensitivity to D-amphetamine in leptin-treated ad libitum fed rats may be a by-product of adipose depletion and, if so, would further support involvement of a peripheral signal other than hypoleptinemia in the modulation of central sensitivity to psychostimulant challenge.
    Physiology & Behavior 01/2005; 83(3):377-81. · 2.87 Impact Factor
  • Article: Chronic food restriction increases D-1 dopamine receptor agonist-induced phosphorylation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2 and cyclic AMP response element-binding protein in caudate-putamen and nucleus accumbens.
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    ABSTRACT: Results of behavioral and c-fos immunohistochemical studies have suggested that chronic food restriction and maintenance of animals at 75-80% of free-feeding body weight may increase d-1 dopamine (DA) receptor function. The purpose of the present study was to determine whether D-1 DA receptor binding and/or mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signaling in caudate-putamen (CPu) and nucleus accumbens (NAc) are increased in food-restricted subjects. In the first experiment, saturation binding of the D-1 DA receptor antagonist [3H]SCH-23390 indicated no difference between food-restricted and ad libitum fed rats with regard to density or affinity of d-1 binding sites in CPu or NAc. In the second experiment, activation of extracellular signal-regulated kinases (ERK1/2) and cyclic AMP response element-binding protein (CREB) by i.c.v. injection of the D-1 DA receptor agonist SKF-82958 (20 microg) were markedly greater in food-restricted than ad libitum fed rats. Given a prior finding that SKF-82958 does not differentially stimulate adenylyl cyclase in CPu or NAc of food-restricted versus ad libitum fed subjects, the present results suggest that increased D-1 DA receptor-mediated ERK1/2 MAP kinase signaling may mediate the enhanced downstream activation of CREB, c-fos, and behavioral responses in food-restricted subjects. It is of interest that food restriction also increased the activation of c-Jun N-terminal protein kinase/stress-activated protein kinase, but this effect was no greater in rats injected with SKF-82958 than in those injected with saline vehicle. This represents additional evidence of increased striatal cell signaling in food-restricted subjects, presumably in response to the i.c.v. injection procedure, although the underlying receptor mechanisms remain to be determined. There were no differences between feeding groups in protein levels of the major phosphatases, MKP-2 and PP1. The upregulation of striatal MAP kinase signaling in food-restricted animals may adaptively serve to facilitate associative learning but, at the same time, increase vulnerability to the rewarding and addictive properties of abused drugs.
    Neuroscience 02/2004; 125(1):289-98. · 3.38 Impact Factor
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    Article: Evidence of increased dopamine receptor signaling in food-restricted rats.
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    ABSTRACT: It is well established that chronic food restriction enhances sensitivity to the rewarding and motor-activating effects of abused drugs. However, neuroadaptations underlying these behavioral effects have not been characterized. The purpose of the present study was to explore the possibility that food restriction produces increased dopamine (DA) receptor function that is evident in behavior, signal transduction, and immediate early gene expression. In the first two experiments, rats received intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) injections of the D1 DA receptor agonist SKF-82958, and the D2/3 DA receptor agonist quinpirole. Both agonists produced greater motor-activating effects in food-restricted than ad libitum-fed rats. In addition, Fos-immunostaining induced by SKF-82958 in caudate-putamen (CPu) and nucleus accumbens (Nac) was greater in food-restricted than ad libitum-fed rats, as was staining induced by quinpirole in globus pallidus and ventral pallidum. In the next two experiments, neuronal membranes prepared from CPu and Nac were exposed to SKF-82958 and quinpirole. Despite the documented involvement of cyclic AMP (cAMP) signaling in D1 DA receptor-mediated c-fos induction, stimulation of adenylyl cyclase (AC) activity by SKF-82958 in CPu and Nac did not differ between groups. Food restriction did, however, decrease AC stimulation by the direct enzyme stimulant, forskolin, but not NaF or MnCl(2), suggesting a shift in AC expression to a less catalytically efficient isoform. Finally, food restriction increased quinpirole-stimulated [(35)S]guanosine triphosphate-gammaS binding in CPu, suggesting that increased functional coupling between D2 DA receptors and G(i) may account for the augmented behavioral and pallidal c-Fos responses to quinpirole. Results of this study support the hypothesis that food restriction leads to neuroadaptations at the level of postsynaptic D1 and D2 receptor-bearing cells which, in turn, mediate augmented behavioral and transcriptional responses to DA. The signaling pathways mediating these augmented responses remain to be fully elucidated.
    Neuroscience 02/2003; 119(4):1157-67. · 3.38 Impact Factor
  • Article: Effects of the D(3) dopamine receptor antagonist, U99194A, on brain stimulation and d-amphetamine reward, motor activity, and c-fos expression in ad libitum fed and food-restricted rats.
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    ABSTRACT: Previous studies indicate that the D(3) dopamine (DA) receptor is preferentially expressed in limbic forebrain DA terminal areas and may mediate functional effects opposite those of the D(1) and D(2) receptor types. However, the locations of the D(3) receptors that regulate behavior, and the range of behavioral functions regulated, are not clear. The objective of this study was to evaluate behavioral and cellular effects of the preferential D(3) dopamine receptor antagonist, U99194A. In experiment 1, the rewarding effect of U99194A (5.0, 10.0 and 20.0 mg/kg, SC) was measured in terms of its ability to lower the threshold for lateral hypothalamic self-stimulation (LHSS) in ad libitum fed rats. To amplify a possibly weak reward signal, testing was also conducted in food-restricted rats. The ability of U99194A to alter the threshold-lowering effect of d-amphetamine was also assessed. In experiment 2, effects of U99194A on horizontal and vertical motor activity were compared in ad libitum fed and food-restricted rats. In experiment 3, effects of a behaviorally active dose of U99194A (5.0 mg/kg) on brain c-fos expression were measured and compared to those produced by d-amphetamine (0.5 mg/kg, IP). In experiment 4, the motor and cellular activating effects of U99194A were challenged with the D(1) dopamine receptor antagonist, SCH-23390 (0.1 mg/kg). U99194A displayed no rewarding efficacy in the LHSS paradigm. U99194A did, however, augment the rewarding effect of d-amphetamine. U99194A also produced a motor activating effect, reversible by SCH-23390, which was greater in food-restricted than ad libitum fed rats. The pattern and intensity of fos-like immunoreactivity (FLI) induced by U99194A was similar to that produced by d-amphetamine and was blocked, in caudate-putamen and nucleus accumbens, by SCH-23390. These results indicate that U99194A has psychostimulant-like effects on motor activity and striatal c-fos expression that are dependent upon the D(1) DA receptor. However, doses of U99194A that are adequate to stimulate motor activity and c-fos expression in striatal and limbic structures do not possess direct rewarding effects in the LHSS paradigm. Overall, these results seem consistent with the hypothesis that D(3) antagonism enhances D(1)/D(2) mediated signaling with behavioral effects dependent on both the density of D(3) receptors and the prevailing level of DA transmission in particular brain regions.
    Psychopharmacology 09/2002; 163(1):76-84. · 4.08 Impact Factor
  • Article: Rewarding and locomotor-activating effects of direct dopamine receptor agonists are augmented by chronic food restriction in rats.
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    ABSTRACT: Previous studies indicate that chronic food restriction augments the rewarding and motor-activating effects of diverse drugs of abuse. The drugs that have so far proved susceptible to the augmenting effect of food restriction all increase synaptic concentrations of dopamine (DA). It is not known whether behavioral effects of selective, direct DA receptor agonists are also subject to the augmenting effect of food restriction. The first objective of this study was to investigate whether the rewarding and locomotor-activating effects of the D1 agonist, A77636, and the D2 agonist, quinpirole are augmented by chronic food restriction. The second purpose was to investigate whether the augmented rewarding and locomotor-activating effects of d-amphetamine in food-restricted rats are reversed by the D1 antagonist, SCH23390. Rewarding effects of drugs were measured in terms of their ability to lower the threshold for lateral hypothalamic self-stimulation (LHSS) using a rate-frequency method. Locomotor-activating effects were measured in terms of the number of midline crossings exhibited by rats in a shuttle apparatus. A77636 (1.0 and 2.5 mg/kg, i.p.) produced a greater threshold-lowering effect in food-restricted than ad libitum fed rats but produced variable effects on locomotor activity with no difference between groups. Quinpirole (0.2 and 0.5 mg/kg, i.p.) produced a marginally greater threshold-lowering effect in food-restricted rats and a dramatic locomotor response that was exclusive to food-restricted rats. The D1 antagonist, SCH23390, at a dose of 0.01 mg/kg (i.p.), had no effect on the lowering of LHSS threshold by amphetamine (0.5 mg/kg, i.p.) in ad libitum fed rats but blocked the augmentation otherwise observed in food-restricted rats. SCH23390, at a dose of 0.025 mg/kg, had no effect on locomotor activity induced by amphetamine (0.5 mg/kg) in ad libitum fed rats but blocked the augmentation otherwise observed in food-restricted rats. These results indicate that the augmentation of reward by food restriction extends to drugs that bypass the DA terminal and act postsynaptically. When taken together with prior immunohistochemical and behavioral findings, these results suggest that food restriction may increase the "enabling" effect of the D1 receptor on DA-mediated behaviors.
    Psychopharmacology 05/2001; 154(4):420-8. · 4.08 Impact Factor
  • Article: Chronic food restriction in rats augments the central rewarding effect of cocaine and the delta1 opioid agonist, DPDPE, but not the delta2 agonist, deltorphin-II.
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    ABSTRACT: Chronic food restriction augments the self-administration and locomotor stimulating effects of opiates, psychostimulants and NMDA antagonists. The extent to which these effects can be attributed to changes in drug pharmacokinetics and bioavailability versus sensitivity of the neuronal circuits that mediate the affected behavioral functions, has not been established. Recent studies point to central adaptive changes insofar as rewarding, locomotor and c-fos-inducing effects of amphetamine and MK-801, injected directly into the lateral ventricle, are greater in food-restricted than ad libitum fed rats. The increased expression of c-fos in nucleus accumbens (NAC) shell, in particular, suggests that food restriction may augment drug reward by modulating dopamine (DA) synaptic function in this area. The first purpose of this study was to investigate whether the rewarding effects of cocaine and the delta1 opioid agonist DPDPE, both of which increase DA synaptic transmission, are augmented by food restriction. The second purpose was to determine whether the delta2 opioid agonist, deltorphin-II, which has been reported to exert DA-independent rewarding effects, is subject to the potentiating effect of food restriction. Rewarding effects of drugs were measured in terms of their ability to lower the threshold for lateral hypothalamic self-stimulation (LHSS) using a rate-frequency method. In separate experiments, cocaine (50, 100 and 150 microg, ICV) and DPDPE (10 and 25 microg, ICV) produced greater threshold-lowering effects in food-restricted than ad libitum fed rats. Deltorphin-II (5.0, 10 and 25 microg, ICV) had no effect on reward thresholds, regardless of feeding regimen. While the reported DA-independence of deltorphin-II rewarding effects seemed to offer a means of testing the hypothesis that DA transmission is the critical modulated variable in food-restricted subjects, rewarding effects of this compound could not be demonstrated in the LHSS paradigm. The present results do, however, confirm and extend prior findings indicating that the enhanced self-administration of abused drugs by food-restricted subjects is due to enhanced sensitivity of a final common pathway for drug reward.
    Psychopharmacology 11/2000; 152(2):200-7. · 4.08 Impact Factor
  • Article: Effect of chronic food restriction on Fos-like immunoreactivity (FLI) induced in rat brain regions by intraventricular MK-801.
    K D Carr, N Kutchukhidze
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    ABSTRACT: The noncompetitive NMDA antagonist, MK-801, produces stimulant and rewarding effects that are mediated by a combination of dopamine-dependent and -independent mechanisms. It was recently demonstrated that, similar to amphetamine, the rewarding and locomotor effects of intraventricular (i.c.v.) MK-801 are potentiated by chronic food restriction. Because food restriction also increases c-Fos expression induced by i.c.v. amphetamine in several subcortical dopamine (DA) terminal areas, Fos-like immunoreactivity (FLI) induced by i.c.v. MK-801 was evaluated in an effort to identify responses that are common to amphetamine and MK-801 and similarly augmented by food restriction. Unlike amphetamine, MK-801 did not increase FLI in caudate-putamen, bed nucleus of the stria terminalis, or ventral pallidum. Similar to amphetamine, MK-801 increased FLI in cingulate cortex, central nucleus of the amygdala and nucleus accumbens (NAC) core, but in none of these areas was the response augmented by food restriction. In medial prefrontal cortex, retrosplenial cortex, and NAC shell, however, MK-801 induced FLI that was augmented by food restriction. An effect that is common to amphetamine and MK-801 is the augmentation of FLI by food restriction in NAC shell. It is therefore suggested that increased releasability of DA, or upregulation of the D-1 receptor linked signal transduction pathway, in NAC shell may mediate the enhanced behavioral sensitivity of food-restricted subjects to drugs of abuse.
    Brain Research 09/2000; 873(2):283-6. · 2.73 Impact Factor
  • Article: Chronic food restriction increases fos-like immunoreactivity (FLI) induced in rat forebrain by intraventricular amphetamine.
    K D Carr, N Kutchukhidze
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    ABSTRACT: Chronic food restriction enhances behavioral responsiveness to amphetamine and other abused drugs. Because this effect is evident when drugs are administered intracerebroventricularly (i.c.v.) as well as systemically, it would seem to reflect increased sensitivity of a neural substrate rather than a change in drug disposition. In the present study, c-Fos immunohistochemistry was used to evaluate whether the magnitude and pattern of cellular activation induced by i.c.v. amphetamine is altered by a regimen of food restriction previously shown to potentiate amphetamine reward. In the absence of amphetamine challenge, there was generally no difference in brain Fos-like immunoreactivity (FLI) between ad libitum fed and food-restricted rats. In response to amphetamine (50 microg), both groups displayed increased FLI in caudate-putamen, nucleus accumbens, bed nucleus of the stria terminalis, ventral pallidum, central nucleus of the amygdala, and cingulate cortex. With the exception of cingulate cortex and caudal caudate-putamen, a significantly greater response was observed in brain regions of food-restricted rats. These results indicate that food restriction augments a cellular immediate early gene (IEG) response to acute amphetamine in brain regions known to mediate rewarding and other behavioral effects of psychostimulants. The difference between these results and those produced by sensitizing regimens of psychostimulant exposure are discussed, as are possible endocrine factors that could be involved in the modulatory effect of food restriction on cellular and behavioral responses to amphetamine.
    Brain Research 05/2000; 861(1):88-96. · 2.73 Impact Factor
  • Article: Hypoinsulinemia may mediate the lowering of self-stimulation thresholds by food restriction and streptozotocin-induced diabetes.
    K D Carr, G Kim, S Cabeza de Vaca
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    ABSTRACT: 7 days beyond cessation of insulin treatment) elevation of threshold in ad libitum fed rats and, more transiently, reversed the threshold-lowering effect of food restriction. Acute insulin treatment (3 mU, 15 min prior) also elevated threshold in food-restricted rats. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that insulin modulates sensitivity of a brain reward system and that hypoinsulinemia may be the common factor in food restriction and diabetes that accounts for the enhancement of perifornical LHSS.
    Brain Research 05/2000; 863(1-2):160-8. · 2.73 Impact Factor
  • Article: 5-Hydroxytryptamine(1A) receptor-stimulated [(35)S]GTPgammaS binding in rat brain: absence of regional differences in coupling efficiency.
    E Meller, H Li, K D Carr, J M Hiller
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    ABSTRACT: In hippocampal membranes, the selective 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT(1A)) receptor agonists 8-hydroxy-dipropylaminotetralin (8-OH-DPAT) and N,N-dipropyl-5-carboxamidotryptamine (N,N-DP-5-CT) stimulated guanosine-5'-O-(3-thio)triphosphate ([(35)S]GTPgammaS) binding by 130 to 140%; binding stimulated by nonselective agonists (5-HT and 5-CT) was approximately 30% greater. However, the selective 5-HT(1A) receptor antagonist N-[2-[4-(2-methoxyphenyl)-1-piperazinyl]ethyl]-N-2-pyridinyl-cyclohex anecarboxamide (WAY100,635) completely abolished the increases produced by 8-OH-DPAT and N,N-DP-5-CT but only eliminated 70% of that elicited by 5-CT. The rank potency order of the tested agonists was identical with their rank order of affinity for 5-HT(1A) receptors [5-CT congruent with N,N-DP-5-CT > R-(+)-8-OH-DPAT > 5-HT > ipsapirone]. Racemic 8-OH-DPAT and the partial agonist ipsapirone exhibited lower intrinsic activity than R-(+)-8-OH-DPAT. R-(+)-8-OH-DPAT also stimulated [(35)S]GTPgammaS binding in cortex, but not in striatum, which lacks 5-HT(1A) receptors. Partial irreversible inactivation of 5-HT(1A) receptors, in vitro with phenoxybenzamine (0.3 or 1 microM) or in vivo with N-ethoxycarbonyl-2-ethoxy-1,2-dihydroquinoline (1 mg/kg), reduced the maximal response produced by R-(+)-8-OH-DPAT but did not alter its EC(50). In autoradiographic sections, R-(+)-8-OH-DPAT stimulated [(35)S]GTPgammaS binding in 5-HT(1A) receptor-rich regions (dorsal hippocampus, 123%; lateral septum, 111%; midhippocampus, 110%; dorsal raphe nucleus, 83%; medial prefrontal cortex, approximately 60%). The EC(50) of R-(+)-8-OH-DPAT did not vary significantly among brain regions (46-96 nM). Partial irreversible blockade of 5-HT(1A) receptors in brain sections (phenoxybenzamine, 10 microM) reduced the maximal response without altering the EC(50) in both the hippocampus and dorsal raphe. Despite prior evidence that dorsal raphe somatodendritic 5-HT(1A) autoreceptors exhibit high receptor/effector coupling efficiency (receptor reserve) compared with postsynaptic receptors in hippocampus, there was no evidence of a difference at the level of receptor/G protein coupling.
    Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics 03/2000; 292(2):684-91. · 3.83 Impact Factor
  • Article: Differential effects of mu and kappa opioid antagonists on Fos-like immunoreactivity in extended amygdala.
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    ABSTRACT: It was previously reported that systemic administration of the nonselective opioid antagonist, naltrexone, induces Fos-like immunoreactivity (FLI) within the central nucleus of the amygdala (CeA), bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (lateral-dorsal division; BSTLD), nucleus accumbens shell (NACshell) and ventral tegmental area (VTA) of free-feeding rats. These findings suggest that cellular activity in these brain regions is subject to opioid-mediated inhibitory control under basal conditions. Considering the involvement of mesoaccumbens dopamine neurons and components of the 'extended amygdala' in motivated behavior and reward, it was hypothesized that the induction of c-Fos by naltrexone accounts for the motivational-affective consequences of opioid antagonism. In Experiment 1, naltrexone was administered intracerebroventricularly (i.c.v.; 100 microg) to determine whether results obtained in the prior immunohistochemical studies could be attributed to blockade of opioid receptors in brain as opposed to peripheral tissues that convey visceral sensory inputs to the CeA and BSTLD. Naltrexone produced a marked increase in FLI within the CeA and BSTLD, and a moderate increase in NACshell. In Experiment 2, the kappa opioid antagonist, nor-binaltorphimine (Nor-BNI; 20.0 microg, i.c.v.) reproduced the effect of naltrexone in BSTLD and CeA, suggesting that the induction of c-Fos in these two structures is a consequence of kappa receptor blockade. The selective mu antagonist, CTAP (2.0 microg, i.c.v.), reproduced the effect of naltrexone in NACshell, suggesting that the induction of c-Fos in this structure is a consequence of mu receptor blockade. The functional implications of these results are discussed in terms of the known functions of these brain regions and opioid receptor types, and the prior observation that chronic food restriction eliminates the FLI induced by naltrexone in CeA and BSTLD. It is suggested that tonic mu opioid-mediated inhibition in NACshell has a predisposing effect on goal-approach behavior in general while kappa opioid-mediated inhibition in CeA and BSTLD has a predisposing effect on palatability-driven feeding in particular. Finally, a possible relationship between food restriction-induced suppression of the kappa opioid mechanism in CeA/BSTLD, local CRH function, and sensitization of the neural substrate for incentive-motivating effects of abused drugs is discussed.
    Brain Research 04/1999; 822(1-2):34-42. · 2.73 Impact Factor
  • Article: Increased site-specific phosphorylation of tyrosine hydroxylase accompanies stimulation of enzymatic activity induced by cessation of dopamine neuronal activity.
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    ABSTRACT: Activation of striatal dopamine (DA) neurons by neuroleptic treatment or by electrical stimulation of the nigrostriatal pathway increases the activity of tyrosine hydroxylase (TH). The increase is mediated by phosphorylation of the enzyme. However, abolition of DA neuronal activity [by gamma-butyrolactone (GBL) treatment or transection of the nigrostriatal pathway] also increases TH activity. Quantitative blot immunolabeling experiments using site- and phosphorylation state-specific antibodies to TH demonstrated that GBL treatment (750 mg/kg, 35 min) significantly increased phosphorylation at Ser19 (+40%) and Ser40 (+217%) without altering Ser31 phosphorylation. Concomitantly, GBL treatment [along with the 3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine (dopa) decarboxylase inhibitor NSD-1015, 100 mg/kg, 30 min] increased in vivo striatal dopa accumulation and in vitro TH activity 3-fold. Likewise, cerebral hemitransection of the nigrostriatal pathway significantly increased phosphorylation of TH at Ser19 (+89%) and Ser40 (+158%) but not at Ser31; dopa levels were increased accordingly (+191%). Kinetic analysis of TH activity established that GBL treatment and hemitransection primarily decreased the Km for the cofactor tetrahydrobiopterin (3-fold). The effects of GBL and hemitransection were abolished or attenuated by pretreatment with the DA agonist R-(-)-N-n-propylnorapomorphine (NPA; 30 microgram/kg, 40 min), presumably via stimulation of inhibitory presynaptic DA autoreceptors. NPA dose-response curves for reversal of GBL-induced dopa accumulation and Ser40 phosphorylation were identical; however, only the highest dose of NPA reversed the small and variable increase in Ser19 phosphorylation. Thus, TH activity seems to be regulated by phosphorylation in both hyper- and hypoactive striatal DA neurons; in the latter case, activation seems to be caused by selective phosphorylation of Ser40.
    Molecular Pharmacology 03/1999; 55(2):202-9. · 4.88 Impact Factor
  • Article: Food restriction enhances the central rewarding effect of abused drugs.
    S Cabeza de Vaca, K D Carr
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    ABSTRACT: Chronic food restriction increases the systemic self-administration and locomotor-stimulating effect of abused drugs. However, it is not clear whether these behavioral changes reflect enhanced rewarding potency or a CNS-based modulatory process. The purpose of this study was to determine whether food restriction specifically increases the rewarding potency of drugs, as indexed by their threshold-lowering effect on lateral hypothalamic self-stimulation, and whether any such effect can be attributed to an enhanced central response rather than changes in drug disposition. When drugs were administered systemically, food restriction potentiated the threshold-lowering effect of amphetamine (0.125, 0.25, and 0.5 mg/kg, i.p.), phencyclidine (1.0, 2.0, and 3.0 mg/kg, i.p.), and dizocilpine (MK-801) (0.0125, 0.05, and 0.1 mg/kg, i.p.) but not nicotine (0.15, 0.3, 0.45 mg/kg, s.c.). When amphetamine (25.0, 50.0, and 100.0 microgram) and MK-801 (5.0, 10.0, and 20.0 microgram) were administered via the intracerebroventricular route, food restriction again potentiated the threshold-lowering effects and increased the locomotor-stimulating effects of both drugs. These results indicate that food restriction increases the sensitivity of neural substrates for rewarding and stimulant effects of drugs. In light of work that attributes rewarding effects of MK-801 to blockade of NMDA receptors on medium spiny neurons in nucleus accumbens, the elements affected by food restriction may lie downstream from the mesoaccumbens dopamine neurons whose terminals are the site of amphetamine-rewarding action. Possible metabolic-endocrine triggers of this effect are discussed, as is the likelihood that mechanisms mediating the modulatory effect of food restriction differ from those mediating sensitization by intermittent drug exposure.
    Journal of Neuroscience 10/1998; 18(18):7502-10. · 7.11 Impact Factor
  • Article: Neuroanatomical patterns of fos-like immunoreactivity induced by a palatable meal and meal-paired environment in saline- and naltrexone-treated rats.
    T H Park, K D Carr
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    ABSTRACT: Opioid antagonists block the positive hedonic response to food taste and are potent inhibitors of palatability-driven feeding. However, the specific brain regions within which opioid peptide secretion contributes to the maintenance of palatability-driven feeding have not been clearly established. In the present study, c-Fos immunohistochemistry was used to identify regions rostral to the hindbrain that display cellular activation in response to a palatable meal and the meal-paired environment. Further, it was determined whether any of the cellular responses could be prevented by pretreating animals with naltrexone. Twenty brain regions known to be involved in gustation, appetite and reward functions were examined. Ingestion of the palatable meal (3.0 g of 30% shortening, 20% sucrose and 50% powdered Purina rat chow) increased Fos-like immunoreactivity (FLI) in lateral hypothalamus (LH), ventral tegmentum (VTA) and medial preoptic area (MPOA), and decreased FLI in the habenula (Hab). The meal-paired environment increased FLI in the VTA and nucleus accumbens shell (NAC shell). Naltrexone (1.0 mg/kg, i.p.) did not block consumption of the small meal but did prevent all of the distinctive increases in FLI induced by the meal and meal-paired environment. Since naltrexone, alone, increased FLI in VTA, NAC shell, central amygdala (ceA) and laterodorsal bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BSTLD), the blunting of ingestion reward by naltrexone may result from direct or transsynaptic activating effects on opponent neuronal activity within this highly interconnected set of structures that mediate and modulate reward.
    Brain Research 10/1998; 805(1-2):169-80. · 2.73 Impact Factor
  • Article: A search for the metabolic signal that sensitizes lateral hypothalamic self-stimulation in food-restricted rats.
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    ABSTRACT: Food deprivation and restriction increase the rewarding potency of food, drugs of abuse, and electrical brain stimulation. Based on evidence that the rewarding effects of these stimuli are mediated by the same neuronal circuitry, lateral hypothalamic self-stimulation (LHSS) was used to investigate the involvement of various metabolic signals in the sensitization of reward. In Experiment 1, glucoprivation with 2-deoxy-d-glucose (150 mg/kg, intraperitoneally (i.p.)) and lipoprivation with nicotinic acid (150 mg/kg, subcutaneously (s.c.)), individually and in combination, failed to affect the LHSS threshold in ad lib.-fed rats. These results suggest that signals associated with acute shortage of metabolic substrate do not sensitize reward. Because numerous responses to more prolonged negative energy balance are mediated by neuropeptide Y (NPY), the effect of exogenous neuropeptide Y upon LHSS was investigated in Experiment 2. Intraventricular infusion of orexigenic neuropeptide Y doses (2.0, 5.0, and 12.5 g), in ad lib.-fed rats, had no effect on LHSS threshold. In Experiment 3, other concomitants of prolonged negative energy balance--high circulating levels of free fatty acids (FFA) and beta-hydroxybutyrate (HDB)-were investigated. Nicotinic acid (250 mg/kg, s.c.), which suppressed serum HDB and FFA levels, had no effect on LHSS in food-restricted or ad lib.-fed rats. Mercaptoacetate (68.4 mg/kg, i.p.), which suppressed serum HDB levels and exacerbated the elevation of FFA levels, also had no effect. Thus, the brain reward system, if modulated by these substances, is not affected by transient, though marked, changes in their levels. To investigate the effect of a sustained increase in levels of FFA and HDB, a "ketogenic" diet was employed. Although this diet produced a fourfold increase in serum HDB levels, it had no effect on LHSS thresholds. Moreover, the failure of mercaptoacetate (68.4 mg/kg, i.p.) to decrease LHSS thresholds in these rats supports the conclusion that acute shortage of metabolic substrate does not sensitize reward. Other possible mechanisms of reward sensitization, including sustained decreases in circulating insulin and leptin and increases in corticosterone, are discussed.
    Physiology & Behavior 07/1998; 64(3):251-60. · 2.87 Impact Factor
  • Article: Effect of adrenalectomy on cocaine facilitation of medial prefrontal cortex self-stimulation.
    K D Carr, G C Abrahamsen
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    ABSTRACT: Adrenalectomy (ADX) is known to block the acquisition of intravenous cocaine self-administration. A previous study therefore examined whether ADX decreases sensitivity of the 'brain reward system' in general, or its response to cocaine in particular, by measuring thresholds for intracranial self-stimulation with and without concurrent cocaine administration. ADX had no effect on thresholds for lateral hypothalamic self-stimulation (LHSS) and did not alter the cocaine dose-response curve for lowering the LHSS threshold. This result suggested that ADX does not affect sensitivity of the brain reward system. However, medial prefrontal cortex (MPFC) appears to be an important site in the mediation of cocaine reinforcing effects, and MPFC self-stimulation (MPFCSS) is mediated by a neural substrate that is largely independent of that which mediates LHSS. The present study therefore assessed whether ADX diminishes cocaine facilitation of MPFCSS. It was found that the threshold-lowering effect of cocaine (5.0, 10.0 and 20.0 mg/kg, i.p. ) did not differ between ADX rats maintained on 0.7% saline, ADX rats maintained on corticosterone (50 microg/ml) in 0.7% saline, and sham-operated controls. However, there was a trend toward desensitization of MPFCSS, itself, following ADX in the group that did not receive corticosterone supplementation. Based on this observation, and the similar responses of MPFCSS and cocaine self-administration to noncontingent priming stimulation, stress, and NMDA receptor antagonism, it is speculated that acquisition of MPFCSS and cocaine self-administration may be dependent upon a common sensitization process that is regulated by corticosterone.
    Brain Research 04/1998; 787(2):321-7. · 2.73 Impact Factor

Institutions

  • 1999–2005
    • New York University USA
      • Department of Psychiatry
      New York City, NY, USA
  • 1985–1998
    • State University of New York Downstate Medical Center
      • Department of Psychiatry
      Brooklyn, NY, USA
  • 1990
    • Medical College of Wisconsin
      • Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Medicine
      Milwaukee, WI, USA
  • 1987
    • Gracie Square Hospital, New York, NY
      New York City, NY, USA