尼古丁
有条件地点偏好
化学
可替宁
上瘾
生物碱
药理学
心理学
医学
内科学
有机化学
神经科学
作者
Theresa Patten,Natalie L. Johnson,Jessica K. Shaw,Amanda M. Dossat,Allison Dreier,Bruce A. Kimball,Daniel W. Wesson,Mariella De Biasi
出处
期刊:ENeuro
[Society for Neuroscience]
日期:2023-05-30
卷期号:10 (6): ENEURO.0390-22.2023
被引量:4
标识
DOI:10.1523/eneuro.0390-22.2023
摘要
Abstract Nicotine is an addictive drug whose popularity has recently increased, particularly among adolescents, because of the availability of electronic nicotine devices (i.e., “vaping”) and nicotine e-liquids containing additives with rich chemosensory properties. Some efforts to understand the role of these additives in nicotine reward suggest that they increase nicotine reward and reinforcement, but the sensory contributions of additives, especially in their vapor forms, are largely untested. Here, to better understand how a fruit-flavored (i.e., strawberry) additive influences nicotine reward and aversion, we used a conditioned place preference (CPP) procedure in which nicotine and a strawberry additive were delivered as a vapor to male and female adolescent mice. We found that nicotine vapor alone can lead to a dose-dependent CPP when using a biased design. The strawberry additive did not produce CPP on its own, and we did not observe an effect of the strawberry additive on nicotine vapor-induced reward. Nevertheless, mice exposed to nicotine plus strawberry additive vapor had higher plasma cotinine concentrations, which did not appear to reflect altered nicotine metabolism. Instead, by directly measuring vapor sampling through respiration monitoring, we uncovered an increase in the amount of sniffing toward strawberry-containing nicotine vapor compared with nicotine vapor alone. Together these data indicate that chemosensory-rich e-liquid additives may enhance the perceived sensory profile of nicotine vapors rather than the reward value per se, which leads to overall increased nicotine exposure.
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