The Impact of High or Low Doses of Nicotine in a Mouse Model of Vapor Self-Administration

被引:7
|
作者
Cooper, Skylar Y. [1 ]
Olszewski, Nathan A. [1 ]
Tetteh-Quarshie, Samuel [1 ]
Hill, Sean P. [1 ]
Ghodsi, Saaman [1 ]
Gonzalez-Castro, Astrid [1 ]
Willis, Clay, V [1 ]
Henderson, Brandon J. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Marshall Univ, Joan C Edwards Sch Med, Dept Biomed Sci, Huntington, WV USA
[2] Marshall Univ, Dept Biomed Sci, Joan C Edwards Sch Med, 1700 3rdAve,410 BBSC, Huntington, WV 25703 USA
关键词
VENTRAL TEGMENTAL AREA; UP-REGULATION; MENTHOL; RECEPTORS; NEURONS; ALPHA-4;
D O I
10.1093/ntr/ntad136
中图分类号
R194 [卫生标准、卫生检查、医药管理];
学科分类号
摘要
Introduction A wide variety of nicotine concentrations and formulations are available to users of electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS). This is increasingly true when considering the many flavors available with ENDS products. To date, there have been few preclinical investigations into the impact of nicotine doses, with and without flavors, on vaping-related behaviors. This present study evaluated how nicotine concentrations relevant to tank-based and pod-based ENDS, with and without flavors, impact reinforcement-related behavior in a mouse model.Aims and Methods Adult male and female C57/BL6J mice were used in vapor-inhalation self-administration assays. Mice were assigned e-liquids containing 6 mg/mL or 60 mg/mL nicotine. Additional mice were assigned these nicotine doses with green apple or menthol flavorants. Mice were trained on fixed-ratio 1 for 10, 2-hour sessions, then five sessions at FR3, three progressive ratio sessions, and two FR3 sessions.Results We observed male mice exhibited higher reinforcement-related behavior to menthol-flavored 6 mg/mL nicotine when compared to female mice. Males were only observed to have a menthol-induced enhancement of self-administration at 6 mg/mL nicotine and not 60 mg/mL nicotine. However, female mice exhibited significant menthol-induced increases in reinforcement-related behaviors with 60 mg/mL nicotine.Conclusions These data provide evidence that males and females exhibit different dose sensitivities to nicotine. These sex-dependent differences in nicotine sensitivity also indicate that flavor-induced enhancement in nicotine intake is dependent on the different doses for each sex.Implications There has been much discussion recently regarding the impact of flavors on vaping-related behavior. Our current study may support prior investigations that suggest flavors enhance the palatability of nicotine-containing products. However, this current study provides evidence that males and females exhibit different sensitivities to nicotine.
引用
收藏
页码:316 / 323
页数:8
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