Dynamic Accumbal Overrepresentation of Reward Cues in Food- and Opioid-Seeking Rats after Prenatal THC Exposure

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Dynamic Accumbal Overrepresentation of Reward Cues in Food- and Opioid-Seeking Rats after Prenatal THC Exposure

Authors

Lujan, M. A.; Young-Morrison, R.; Aroni, S.; Katona, I.; Melis, M.; Cheer, J.

Abstract

The increasing prevalence of cannabis use during pregnancy has raised significant medical concerns, primarily related to the presence of {Delta}9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), which readily crosses the placenta and impacts fetal brain development. Previous research has identified midbrain dopaminergic neuronal alterations related to maternal THC consumption. However, the enduring consequences that prenatal cannabis exposure (PCE) has on striatum-based processing during voluntary reward pursuit have not been specifically determined. Here, we characterize PCE rats during food (palatable pellets) or opioid (remifentanyl)-maintained reward seeking. We find that the supra motivational phenotype of PCE rats is independent of value-based processing and is instead related to augmented reinforcing efficiency of opioid rewards. Our findings reveal that in utero THC exposure leads to increased cue-evoked dopamine release responses and an overrepresentation of cue-aligned, effort-driven striatal patterns of encoding. Recapitulating findings in humans, drug-related neurobiological adaptations of PCE were more pronounced in males, who also showed increased vulnerability for relapse. Collectively, these findings indicate that prenatal THC exposure in male rats engenders to a pronounced neurodevelopmental susceptibility to addiction-like disorders later in life.

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