Differential function of medial prefrontal cortex catecholaminergic receptors after long-term sugar consumption

Seraid Caynas-Rojas, Gabriela Rodríguez-García, Ilse Delint-Ramírez, María Isabel Miranda

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

4 Scopus citations

Abstract

The medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) has reciprocal projections with many cerebral structures that are crucial in the control of food ingestion behavior and reward processing; Thus the mPFC has an important function in taste memory recognition. Previous results indicate that long-term consumption of sugar produces changes in appetitive re-learning and suggest that this could trigger an escalating consumption due to the inability to learn new negative consequences related to the same taste. Further evidence suggests that general identity reward value could be encoded in the mPFC. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to evaluate in rats whether after 21 days of sugar consumption the increase in sweet taste preference and latent inhibition of conditioned taste aversion (CTA) were affected differentially by pharmacological activation or blockage of dopaminergic and β-adrenergic receptors, in the mPFC, during CTA acquisition. Results showed that after long-term sugar exposure, mPFC activation of β-adrenergic receptors with clenbuterol delayed aversive memory extinction, but the blockade with propranolol or activation of dopaminergic receptors with apomorphine increased CTA latent inhibition and accelerated aversive memory extinction only after acute sugar exposure. Only dopaminergic blockade with haloperidol prevented sweet taste preference expression after long-term sugar consumption, increased CTA latent inhibition and accelerated extinction after acute sugar exposure. Taken together, the present data provide evidence that catecholaminergic receptors in the mPFC after prolonged sugar consumption underwent functional changes related to re-learning and new aversive taste learning.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)495-503
Number of pages9
JournalBehavioural Brain Research
Volume356
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 1 2019

Keywords

  • Appetitive behavior
  • Beta-adrenergic receptors
  • Dopamine
  • Extinction
  • Latent inhibition
  • Taste memory

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Behavioral Neuroscience

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