Individual differences in oxycodone addiction-like behaviors in a large cohort of heterogeneous stock (HS) rats
Author:
Kallupi MarsidaORCID, de Guglielmo Giordano, Carrette Lieselot LG, Simpson Sierra, Kononoff Jenni, Kimbrough Adam, Smith Lauren C, Shankar Kokila, Avelar Alicia, Conlisk Dana, Brennan Molly, Tieu Lani, Sedighim Sharona, Boomhower Brent, Maturin Lisa, Fannon McKenzie J, Martinez Angelica, Crook Caitlin, Dirik Selen, Velarde Nathan, Schweitzer Paul, Bonnet-Zahedi Selene, Othman Dyar N., Sichel Benjamin, Guess Kwynn, Peng Beverly, Hu Andrew S., Chun Lucas E., Milan Kristel, Lau Justin, Zheng Yicen, Vang Ashley, Solberg Woods Leah C., Palmer Abraham A., George Olivier
Abstract
AbstractFamily and twin studies demonstrate that genetic factors determine 20-60% of the vulnerability to opioid use disorder. However, the genes/alleles that mediate the risk of developing addiction-related behaviors, including the sensitivity to the analgesic efficacy of opioids, the development of tolerance, dependence, and escalation of oxycodone taking and seeking, have been ill-defined, thus hindering efforts to design pharmacological interventions to enable precision medicine strategies. Here we characterized oxycodone addiction-like behaviors in heterogeneous stock (HS) rats, that show high genetic diversity that mimics the high genetic variability in humans. HS rats were allowed to self-administer oxycodone for two h/daily for four days (ShA) and then moved to 12h/daily (LgA) for 14 days. Animals were screened for motivation to self-administer oxycodone using a progressive-ratio (PR) schedule of reinforcement and for the development of withdrawal-induced hyperalgesia and tolerance to the analgesic effects of oxycodone using the von-Frey and tail immersion tests, respectively. To reduce cohort-specific effects, we used cohorts of 46-60 rats and normalized the response level within cohorts using a Z-score. To take advantage of the four opioid-related behaviors and further identify subjects that are consistently vulnerable vs. resilient to compulsive oxycodone use, we computed an Addiction Index by averaging normalized responding (Z-scores) for the four behavioral tests. Results showed high individual variability between vulnerable and resilient rats, likely to facilitate the detection of gene variants associated with vulnerable vs. resilient individuals. Such data will have considerable translational value for designing follow-up studies in humans.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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