Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Neuropsychopharmacology" Category Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 mGlu5 receptor availability in youth at risk for addictions: effects of vulnerability traits and cannabis use. Cox SML, Tippler M, Jaworska N, Smart K, Castellanos-Ryan N, Durand F, Allard D, Benkelfat C, Parent S, Dagher A, Vitaro F, Boivin M, Pihl RO, Côté S, Tremblay RE, Séguin JR, Leyton M 32413893
CSBN
2 Extra-striatal D2/3 receptor availability in youth at risk for addiction. Jaworska N, Cox SML, Tippler M, Castellanos-Ryan N, Benkelfat C, Parent S, Dagher A, Vitaro F, Boivin M, Pihl RO, Côté SM, Tremblay RE, Séguin JR, Leyton M 32259831
CSBN
3 Epigenetic Changes of FKBP5 as a Link Connecting Genetic and Environmental Risk Factors with Structural and Functional Brain Changes in Major Depression. Tozzi L, Farrell C, Booij L, Doolin K, Nemoda Z, Szyf M, Pomares FB, Chiarella J, O'Keane V, Frodl T 29182159
PSYCHOLOGY
4 Alcohol-Seeking Triggered by Discrete Pavlovian Cues is Invigorated by Alcohol Contexts and Mediated by Glutamate Signaling in the Basolateral Amygdala. Sciascia JM, Reese RM, Janak PH, Chaudhri N 25953360
PSYCHOLOGY
5 Dampened Mesolimbic Dopamine Function and Signaling by Saturated but not Monounsaturated Dietary Lipids. Hryhorczuk C, Florea M, Rodaros D, Poirier I, Daneault C, Des Rosiers C, Arvanitogiannis A, Alquier T, Fulton S 26171719
CSBN
6 Augmentation of Heroin Seeking Following Chronic Food Restriction in the Rat: Differential Role for Dopamine Transmission in the Nucleus Accumbens Shell and Core. D'Cunha TM, Daoud E, Rizzo D, Bishop AB, Russo M, Mourra G, Hamel L, Sedki F, Shalev U 27824052
CSBN
7 Varenicline Reduces Context-Induced Relapse to Alcohol-Seeking through Actions in the Nucleus Accumbens. Lacroix F, Pettorelli A, Maddux JN, Heidari-Jam A, Chaudhri N 27834390
PSYCHOLOGY
8 Non-Contingent Exposure to Amphetamine in Adolescence Recruits miR-218 to Regulate Dcc Expression in the VTA. Cuesta S, Restrepo-Lozano JM, Silvestrin S, Nouel D, Torres-Berrío A, Reynolds LM, Arvanitogiannis A, Flores C 29154364
CSBN
9 Too Depressed to Swim or Too Afraid to Stop? A Reinterpretation of the Forced Swim Test as a Measure of Anxiety-Like Behavior. Anyan J, Amir S 29210364
PSYCHOLOGY
10 Context and topography determine the role of basolateral amygdala metabotropic glutamate receptor 5 in appetitive Pavlovian responding. Khoo SY, LeCocq MR, Deyab GE, Chaudhri N 30758331
PSYCHOLOGY

 

Title:Dampened Mesolimbic Dopamine Function and Signaling by Saturated but not Monounsaturated Dietary Lipids.
Authors:Hryhorczuk CFlorea MRodaros DPoirier IDaneault CDes Rosiers CArvanitogiannis AAlquier TFulton S
Link:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26171719?dopt=Abstract
Publication:
Keywords:
PMID:26171719 Category:Neuropsychopharmacology Date Added:2019-05-31
Dept Affiliation: CSBN
1 Centre de Recherche du CHUM and Montreal Diabetes Research Center, Montreal, QC, Canada.
2 Department of Physiology, Université de Montréal, Montreal, QC, Canada.
3 Center for Studies in Behavioral Neurobiology, Concordia University, Montreal, QC, Canada.
4 Department of Nutrition, Université de Montréal, Montreal, QC, Canada.
5 Montreal Heart Institute, Montreal, QC, Canada.
6 Department of Medicine, Université de Montréal, Montreal, QC, Canada.

Description:

Dampened Mesolimbic Dopamine Function and Signaling by Saturated but not Monounsaturated Dietary Lipids.

Neuropsychopharmacology. 2016 Feb;41(3):811-21

Authors: Hryhorczuk C, Florea M, Rodaros D, Poirier I, Daneault C, Des Rosiers C, Arvanitogiannis A, Alquier T, Fulton S

Abstract

Overconsumption of dietary fat is increasingly linked with motivational and emotional impairments. Human and animal studies demonstrate associations between obesity and blunted reward function at the behavioral and neural level, but it is unclear to what degree such changes are a consequence of an obese state and whether they are contingent on dietary lipid class. We sought to determine the impact of prolonged ad libitum intake of diets rich in saturated or monounsaturated fat, separate from metabolic signals associated with increased adiposity, on dopamine (DA)-dependent behaviors and to identify pertinent signaling changes in the nucleus accumbens (NAc). Male rats fed a saturated (palm oil), but not an isocaloric monounsaturated (olive oil), high-fat diet exhibited decreased sensitivity to the rewarding (place preference) and locomotor-sensitizing effects of amphetamine as compared with low-fat diet controls. Blunted amphetamine action by saturated high-fat feeding was entirely independent of caloric intake, weight gain, and plasma levels of leptin, insulin, and glucose and was accompanied by biochemical and behavioral evidence of reduced D1R signaling in the NAc. Saturated high-fat feeding was also tied to protein markers of increased AMPA receptor-mediated plasticity and decreased DA transporter expression in the NAc but not to alterations in DA turnover and biosynthesis. Collectively, the results suggest that intake of saturated lipids can suppress DA signaling apart from increases in body weight and adiposity-related signals known to affect mesolimbic DA function, in part by diminishing D1 receptor signaling, and that equivalent intake of monounsaturated dietary fat protects against such changes.

PMID: 26171719 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]





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