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The Neurobiology of Drug addiction

What happens in the brain that turns normal motivation into an addiction? Addiction is believed to be underlied by alterations of specific synapses in the reward system. These alterations may cause the incontrollable desire to consume the drug. Which synapses are altered during the development of addiction? What exactly are the changes? Can we attenuate addictive behavior by compensating for the synaptic alterations caused by drugs? A main goal in our lab is to reveal the permanent synaptic changes that occur in drug addiction in specific neurons of the reward system. We then aim to target the altered synapses with the intention to attenuate addictive behavior. To achieve this we use animal models of drug addiction together with electrophysiological and optogenetic/chemogenetic tools in transgenic mice.

Abstinence from repeated cocaine injections alters the glutamatergic output of ventral pallidal neurons, measured as AMPA/NMDA (A/N), to different targets (left) and potentiates the inhibitory effect of dynorphin on GABA release from nucleus accumbens terminals in the ventral pallidum expressing the D1 dopamine receptor. 

(Adapted from Inbar et al. and Levi et al. 2020 J. Neurosci.)

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