Stimulant-mediated c-fos induction in striatum as a function of age, sex, and prenatal cocaine exposure.
Induction of the immediate-early gene c-fos by the stimulants cocaine and amphetamine (AMPH) was analyzed by Fos immunocytochemistry at different ages in the brains of prenatally cocaine-treated and control rats. Cocaine and AMPH induced c-fos in patches of striatal neurons during the first postnatal week, and thereafter produced a progressively more homogeneous pattern that was more dense medially. Quantification of Fos-immunoreactive cells in older rats revealed differences related to sex and prenatal cocaine treatment. Both cocaine and AMPH produced dose-dependent increases in the number of Fos-immunoreactive cells in striatum. Prenatal cocaine exposure resulted in increased Fos in males in response to AMPH (2 mg/kg) at P18 and cocaine (10 mg/kg) at 1-2 months. In females, prenatal cocaine treatment resulted in a reduced response to cocaine at 1-2 months. Increased c-fos induction was observed in control females compared to control males in response to low doses of stimulants; no such sex difference was observed in prenatally cocaine-treated rats. The dopamine D1 antagonist SCH23390 blocked cocaine-mediated c-fos induction in all groups. The NMDA antagonist MK-801 blocked cocaine-mediated c-fos induction in the medial striatum. In females only, MK-801 pretreatment resulted in a dramatic increase in the number of Fos-immunoreactive cells in lateral striatum. These findings indicate differences in the neural basis of c-fos induction in males and females, and changes in stimulant-mediated c-fos induction resulting from prenatal cocaine exposure.[1]References
- Stimulant-mediated c-fos induction in striatum as a function of age, sex, and prenatal cocaine exposure. Snyder-Keller, A., Keller, R.W. Brain Res. (1998) [Pubmed]
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