Involvement of nucleus accumbens SERCA2b in methamphetamine‐induced conditioned place preference

Author:

Wang Yujing1,Duan Fan1,Li Junda1ORCID,Li Xiangyu1,Xia Lingling1,Zhao Wei1,Wang Ze1,Song Xun1,Chen Juan1,Wang Jingjing1,Wang Yue1,Zhang Jing1,Zhang Xiaochu12ORCID,Jiao Dongliang1

Affiliation:

1. School of Mental Health Bengbu Medical University Bengbu China

2. CAS Key Laboratory of Brain Function and Disease and School of Life Sciences University of Science and Technology of China Hefei China

Abstract

AbstractMethamphetamine (METH) is a highly addictive psycho‐stimulant that induces addictive behaviour by stimulating increased dopamine release in the nucleus accumbens (NAc). The sarco/endoplasmic reticulum calcium ion transport ATPases (SERCA or ATP2A) is a calcium ion (Ca2+) pump in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membrane. SERCA2b is a SERCA subtype mainly distributed in the central nervous system. This study used conditioned place preference (CPP), a translational drug reward model, to observe the effects of SERCA and SERCA2b on METH‐CPP in mice. Result suggested that the activity of SERCA was significantly decreased in NAc after METH‐CPP. Intraperitoneal SERCA agonist CDN1163 injection or bilateral CDN1163 microinjection in the NAc inhibited METH‐CPP formation. SERCA2b overexpression by the Adeno‐associated virus can reduce the DA release of NAc and inhibit METH‐CPP formation. Although microinjection of SERCA inhibitor thapsigargin in the bilateral NAc did not significantly aggravate METH‐CPP, interference with SERCA2b expression in NAc by adeno‐associated virus increased DA release and promoted METH‐CPP formation. METH reduced the SERCA ability to transport Ca2+ into the ER in SHSY5Y cells in vitro, which was reversed by CDN1163. This study revealed that METH dysregulates intracellular calcium balance by downregulating SERCA2b function, increasing DA release in NAc and inducing METH‐CPP formation. Drugs that target SERCA2b may have the potential to treat METH addiction.

Publisher

Wiley

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