Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

A Role for the Insular Cortex in Long-Term Memory for Context-Evoked Drug Craving in Rats

2012; Springer Nature; Volume: 37; Issue: 9 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1038/npp.2012.59

ISSN

1740-634X

Autores

Marco Contreras, Pablo Billeke, Sergio Vicencio, Carlos Madrid, Guetón Perdomo, Marcela González, Fernando Torrealba,

Tópico(s)

Neurotransmitter Receptor Influence on Behavior

Resumo

Drug craving critically depends on the function of the interoceptive insular cortex, and may be triggered by contextual cues. However, the role of the insula in the long-term memory linking context with drug craving remains unknown. Such a memory trace probably resides in some neocortical region, much like other declarative memories. Studies in humans and rats suggest that the insula may include such a region. Rats chronically implanted with bilateral injection cannulae into the high-order rostral agranular insular cortex (RAIC) or the primary interoceptive posterior insula (pIC) were conditioned to prefer the initially aversive compartment of a 2-compartment place preference apparatus by repeatedly pairing it to amphetamine. We found a reversible but long-lasting loss (ca. 24 days) of amphetamine-conditioned place preference (CPP) and a decreased expression in the insula of zif268, a crucial protein in memory reconsolidation, when anisomycin (ANI) was microinjected into the RAIC immediately after the reactivation of the conditioned amphetamine/context memory. ANI infusion into the RAIC without reactivation did not change CPP, whereas ANI infusion into pIC plus caused a 15 days loss of CPP. We also found a 24 days loss of CPP when we reversibly inactivated pIC during extinction trials. We interpret these findings as evidence that the insular cortex, including the RAIC, is involved in a context/drug effect association. These results add a drug-related memory function to the insular cortex to the previously found role of the pIC in the perception of craving or malaise.

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